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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Deadlocked N Ireland heads for snap polls

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DUBLIN: Northern Ireland was on Monday headed for snap elections within weeks as its worst political crisis in years raised fears of an end to hard-won stability while impacting upcoming Brexit negotiations.


The nationalist Sinn Fein party passed up its last chance to nominate a new deputy first minister to the power-sharing executive to replace Martin McGuinness, meaning elections are all but certain.


McGuinness resigned last week in protest over a botched green heating scheme following weeks of tensions with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which supports British rule of the province.


The government’s Northern Ireland minister James Brokenshire is now expected to call elections — the second in 10 months — to be held within six weeks. “Sinn Fein have indicated that they’re not intending to put a replacement forward. The clear indications are that we are moving towards an election,” Brokenshire told the BBC on Sunday.


The crisis over a green energy scheme instigated by Arlene Foster, leader of the DUP, when she was economy minister has been simmering for months. She has repeatedly refused to step aside temporarily to allow an investigation into a scheme which could cost Northern Ireland taxpayers up to £490 million ($592 million, 558 million euros) and McGuinness last week quit his position, accusing Foster of “deep-seated arrogance”.


Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive and assembly were formed under the 1998 Belfast Agreement that effectively ended three decades of political violence in Northern Ireland. The sectarian voting patterns that have always characterised elections in the province’s deeply divided society could remain intact in the next vote, bringing little prospect of an end to the political stalemate. — AFP


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