Aaron O'Neill
Research lead for society, economy, and politics: Europe & global
Get in touch with us nowThe Good Friday Agreement, or the Belfast Agreement, was the culmination of the Northern Ireland peace process that brought about the end of the 30-year conflict known as the Troubles. The peace process itself involved years of negotiations between the leading nationalist parties (generally seen as representing Northern Ireland's Catholic community), unionist parties (generally seen as representing Northern Ireland's Protestant community), representatives of the British, Irish, and U.S. governments, as well as paramilitary organizations.
The Agreement involved a series of proposals touching aspects such as demilitarization, identity, devolution, and cross-community cooperation. The Agreement laid the framework for the Northern Ireland government to be reinstated after a 25-year absence, with mechanisms in place to ensure power-sharing and fair representation between Northern Ireland's Catholic and Protestant communities. It also reaffirmed Northern Ireland's position as an equal part of the United Kingdom, but stipulated that the people of Northern Ireland may change this through a referendum (generally assumed to mean reunification with the Republic of Ireland), while it also extended British and Irish citizenship to anybody born in the north. In terms of demilitarization and ending the violence, the Agreement stipulated that all complying paramilitary groups were to disarm and cease operations, and it ensured the British Army presence in Northern Ireland would be significantly reduced. To many, the most controversial aspect of the Agreement was the early release of convicted paramilitary personnel from organization who signed the Agreement, regardless of the charge or length of their remaining sentence - for this reason, the hardline Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) did not support the Agreement.
The Good Friday Agreement was signed by the respective parties on April 10, 1998 (albeit, without the support from the DUP and some smaller paramilitary groups), and was then put to the public on both sides of the Irish border in referenda on May 22, 1998. The vote passed easily on both sides, with 71 percent support in the north, and 94 percent in the south. In Northern Ireland, the background of voters was not recorded, and therefore there is no official breakdown of the vote by religious background, yet, the most widely accepted estimates suggest that support in Catholic communities may have been as high as 97 percent, while support in Protestant communities was roughly 52 percent - again, largely in opposition to the early release of paramilitary prisoners.
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The Australian Parliament
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Opinion on political parties
Voice to Parliament Referendum
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