The recent IRA statement is an important step on the path to peace. It was the statement that everybody had been waiting for, but not surprisingly, it came at an unexpected hour. The IRA was never going to accept being, as they would see it, stood over, humiliated and bullied into making this declaration, so it couldn't realistically come at the end of any round of "talks." That does not mean to say that I don't believe the members of the IRA really do need to present themselves humbly and repentant before all the people of this land (and beyond) for the hurts they inflicted in the past, as indeed all sides in the conflict must do. Concrete actions on the front of decommissioning must follow without delay. Already on the day following the IRA statement, further British demilitarization has taken place. This shows the good will of the British government.Not surprisingly, there is a restrained and somewhat guarded reaction within the local moderate Unionist community. The confidence and trust of these people needs to be gained. Criminal activity in former IRA circles leaves them still somewhat suspicious of the Irish Republican movement. The more extreme form of Unionism represented by the Reverend Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionist Party, a group that gained a very large vote in the most recent elections, has come out with a statement in which these words are like the refrain of a litany: "We alone will dictate!" This is just a mirror reflection of the former, then still militant, Sinn Fein (literally in Irish, "us alone") attitude. The fact that a loyalist feud is currently taking place is worrying. It would be a much healthier situation if loyalists and unionists were united to welcome the IRA initiative.


