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Tuesday October 13, 2009

Clinton In Talks With Leaders In Belfast

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in Dublin for talks on Sunday with Taoiseach Brian Cowen and Foreign Minister Michael Martin (Photocall)

US secretary of state Hillary Clinton held talks with the North's political leaders in Belfast on Monday as they broker an historic deal on sharing responsibility for the policing and justice systems.

Sinn Féin and the Democratic Unionists have yet to finalize an agreement on devolving policing and justice powers from Westminster to the Stormont Assembly, but lengthy talks with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown last week carved out a financial blueprint for the move.

The US delegation will discuss its continued political and economic support for the Irish peace process when Mrs Clinton meets First Minister Peter Robinson and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness.

The US secretary is making her seventh visit to the North since she first arrived as First Lady with her husband, former president Bill Clinton, to famously boost the fledgling search for peace in the 1990s.

As she arrived in Belfast on Sunday night, she threw her weight behind the efforts of the British and Irish governments to secure the devolution of policing and justice powers to Stormont.

"The step of devolution for policing and justice is an absolutely essential milestone," Mrs Clinton said.

Sinn Féin has been pressing for movement on completing the devolution of the powers, but the DUP has said it will not agree to a deal until all issues are resolved to its satisfaction.

The DUP has also been accused of stalling the process in the face of hard-line voices opposed to a deal with republicans though this has been denied by party leader Peter Robinson, who said policing and justice were life and death issues that required careful handling by politicians.

The St Andrews political agreement that led to the formation of the power-sharing administration at Stormont, which is dominated by the DUP and Sinn Féin, promised the devolution of the powers.

Sinn Féin and the DUP have been engaged in a long running dispute over the timing of the move, though in the fall of last year they agreed an outline plan to deliver devolution.

Mrs Clinton said: "Clearly there are questions and some apprehensions but I believe that due to the concerted effort of the British government, Irish Government and support of friends like us in the US, that the parties understand this is a step they must take together.

"It will take the leaders of both communities working together to continue not only the devolution but then to make day-to-day governing a reality, and I'm confident that that is within reach."

Mr Brown led exhaustive talks over recent weeks aimed at delivering a final deal on devolution.

Mr Robinson and Mr McGuinness emerged from late night talks in Downing Street at midnight on Thursday, with the Sinn Féin representative declaring a final financial plan had been agreed.

Mr Robinson claimed the government offer was an advance on earlier proposals to cover Northern policing budgets and courts service budgets, as well as financial pressures caused by legacy issues from the Troubles.

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