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Paramilitary group renounces violence in N. Ireland

To store weapons, not give them up

Email|Print| Text size + By Shawn Pogatchnik
Associated Press / November 12, 2007

DUBLIN - The largest Protestant paramilitary group in Northern Ireland renounced violence yesterday, officially ending the decades of terror it inflicted on the province's Catholic minority.

The outlawed Ulster Defense Association said it was disbanding all of its armed units and would store its weapons beyond the reach of rank-and-file members, but was not willing yet to hand over its arsenal to international disarmament officials.

"The Ulster Defense Association believes that the war is over, and we are now in a new democratic dispensation that will lead to permanent political stability," the group said, referring to the Catholic-Protestant administration established in May under terms of a 1998 peace accord.

UDA representatives made the announcement in front of hundreds of supporters in a hard-line Protestant part of Belfast yesterday, Remembrance Sunday, the solemn British holiday that honors the dead from two world wars.

The declaration followed months of pressure on the UDA to catch up to Northern Ireland's other two big paramilitary groups - the Irish Republican Army and Ulster Volunteer Force - which had already renounced violence.

The British and Irish governments welcomed the UDA declaration, but said the Protestant extremists needed to match the position of the IRA, the Catholic group that disarmed in 2005 and pledged never to resume its failed campaign to force Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom.

Yesterday's UDA statement renounced violence - but made this conditional on the IRA's own good behavior. It said all UDA intelligence files on potential targets would be destroyed "and, as a consequence of this, all weaponry will be put beyond use."

But the UDA's most prominent commander, Jackie McDonald, emphasized that the UDA was not ready to hand even a single gun or bullet to disarmament officials - a key objective of the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement.

McDonald said the vast majority of people in the poorest Protestant districts of Belfast don't want the UDA to disarm because they remain fearful that a new IRA generation could rearm and resume bloodshed. UDA guns "are the people's guns," he said.

Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward, the senior British government official in the province, said the test of the UDA's commitment to peace would be whether they disarm in a credible, independently verified fashion.

"They will be judged by their actions, not their words," Woodward said.

Prime Minister Bertie Ahern of Ireland said he expected the UDA to begin cooperating soon with John de Chastelain, the retired Canadian general who has tried since 1997 to persuade Northern Ireland's myriad underground armies to surrender their arms.

"It is important that we remember at this time the victims and survivors of UDA violence, an organization which carried out appalling atrocities," Ahern said, adding, "It is my enduring hope that those days are gone and that the era of paramilitarism is now being left behind forever."

So far only the IRA, the most formidably armed group, has surrendered its weapon stockpiles.

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