John Hume meets the IRA
BY ART Mac EOIN
In January 1985, a debate took place on BBC radio between
Sinn FŽin President Gerry Adams and the then SDLP leader John
Hume.
The purpose of the programme was to elaborate on a
possible interaction between Sinn FŽin and the SDLP after local
elections in the Six Counties, which were due the following May.
The debate, however, did not become memorable for any of the
important issues raised. Towards the end of the discussion, Adams
told Hume that Sinn FŽin would issue an invitation to the SDLP
for talks. It was Hume's startled reaction that made the
headlines.
Hume claimed that it was the leadership of the IRA which made
all the important decisions within republicanism. Impervious to
explanations that it was Sinn FŽin's Ard Chomhairle which made
decions on behalf of the party, Hume insisted that he would only
talk to the IRA.
On Friday 1 February, the leadership of the IRA accepted
Hume's request for talks saying:
"We welcome this opportunity to rebut the disastrous
consequences for the nationalist community of the SDLP's stance."
For years, the SDLP by its weakness on the British presence, the
loyalist veto and Irish reunification, had allowed the British
state to continue trying to enforce internal solutions, the IRA
said, adding: "We have plenty to discuss. We are also confident
that Mr Hume can take adequate security precautions for the
meeting. We await his response and will be in contact."
Hume dismissed a further invitation to talks from Sinn FŽin,
labelling the party "mere surrogates".
Meanwhile, Hume's impending meeting with the IRA was perceived
by the political elite in Dublin as a breach of the
anti-republican alliance within constitutional nationalism. The
then Taoiseach, Fine Gael's Garret Fitzgerald, went live on RTƒ
radio to read a prepared statement in which he said that any
meeting between Hume and the IRA should be "broken up" and he
warned that members of the Army Council, if identified, would be
arrested.
In contrast, Fianna F‡il leader Charles Haughey expressed
"full support" for Hume's "initiative".
On Saturday, 23 February, Hume met three representatives of
the IRA leadership, including an escapee from the H-Blocks of
Long Kesh. He was familiar with the other two IRA representatives
and quite satisfied with their seniority.
The talks collpased before they could begin when Hume objected
to an IRA proposal to videorecord the opening and closing
statements. The reason for the filming - that a true record of
the meeting would guarantee no misrepresentation and would allow
the IRA some balance of media coverage - was explained to Hume
but he refused. He suggested the issuing of a joint statement
which was to be drafted after the meeting, the contents of which,
he said, he would subsequently deviate from in interviews. The
IRA rejected this proposal.
Hume's IRA distraction from meeting with Sinn FŽin merely
postponed the inevitability of SDLP talks with the republican
party and the first, tentative steps in a slow gradual search
towrds a peace process in Ireland.
The radio debate between Gerry Adams and John Hume which
resulted in Hume's abortive meeting with the IRA took place on 31
January 1985, 17 years ago this week.