Joint
Statement with
United Kingdom Prime Minister Tony Blair
April 8, 2003
We affirm our individual and collective commitment to the Good Friday Agreement
and to its full and complete implementation. The people of Northern Ireland
and their leaders have a momentous opportunity to ensure that peace is strengthened
and political stability secured.
The opportunity to cement the peace is historic. The case is compelling;
the cause just; the outcome must be fair, balanced, and comprehensive. The
acceptance and implementation of the Governments' forthcoming proposals would
promote the reconciliation that the people of Northern Ireland desire and
deserve.
These proposals, built on the firm ground of the Good Friday Agreement,
hold out the prospect of enormous progress. They reflect our shared view
that there can be no place in Northern Ireland for paramilitary activity
and capability. The break with paramilitarism in all its past forms must
be complete and irrevocable. The proposals will encompass a wide range of
additional issues, including normalization, the devolution of justice and
policing, sustainable political institutions, and human rights. The participation
of all parties in effective community policing, a necessary key to long term
stability in Northern Ireland, would constitute a significant step forward.
There will be a need for a mechanism, one designed to safeguard the interests
and rights of all, to verify compliance with the key undertakings. All three
Governments are committed to supporting effective monitoring arrangements.
Acts of completion, and a reaffirmation that political change is to come
through exclusively peaceful and democratic means, will renew and expand
trust and confidence.
Peace is its own dividend. At the same time, peace fosters an environment
where entrepreneurship and business creativity can thrive, where jobs will
be created, and where prosperity will follow. Our governments have agreed
to work together to explore ways to encourage the flow of investment to Northern
Ireland.
We call upon Northern Ireland's political representatives, community and
business leaders, and citizens from all walks of life to respond positively
to the forthcoming statements. We see no better way to fulfill the promise
of the Good Friday Agreement. They have an unprecedented chance to continue
their bold march from a troubled past to a future of promise and hope for
generations to come. In seizing this opportunity, Northern Ireland will serve
as a model to the world for dialogue and negotiation, demonstrating to all
that what was once divided can be drawn together in a spirit of reconciliation
and respect.