Northern Ireland: Bill of Rights Debate

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Department: Northern Ireland Office

Northern Ireland: Bill of Rights

Lord Kilclooney Excerpts
Tuesday 15th March 2011

(13 years, 2 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Shutt of Greetland Portrait Lord Shutt of Greetland
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If you want the answer you can have it—the Prime Minister announced that a group of people would be put together for a human rights Act for Britain. Therefore, the Belfast agreement has to embrace those other three factors.

Lord Kilclooney Portrait Lord Kilclooney
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My Lords, can the Minister confirm that the Belfast agreement brought benefits to the peoples of both states in the island of Ireland? Can he recall that there were obligations on the Dublin Government in that agreement to create a human rights commission, to ratify the Council of Europe’s convention on national minorities, and to legislate for employment equality and for respect of the different traditions in the island? Can he confirm whether any of those four requirements have been honoured yet by the Dublin Government? For those that have not been honoured, will he make representations to the new Government elected in the south of Ireland a few weeks ago?

Lord Shutt of Greetland Portrait Lord Shutt of Greetland
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My Lords, as I indicated earlier, I will do my best to speak for this Government. It is someone else’s job to speak for the Government of Ireland. However, in another coalition agreement, between Fine Gael and Labour in the south, there is one line that the Belfast agreement and the St Andrews agreement “shall be honoured”. If that is in their coalition agreement, it applies to them as it does here, and I will see to it that I write accordingly.