Northern Ireland Brooke/Mayhew Talks 1991-1992

WORK IN PROGRESS - IN THE FINAL STAGES OF EDITING A series of talks launched by Peter Brooke, Secretary of State for Northern in Ireland, which began in April 1991, and were carried on intermittently by Brooke and his successor, Patrick Mayhew, until November 1992.

British-SDLP Talks

Dates of meetings created from source material, but records of discussions not currently available to us.

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Session 13127: 1992-10-29 09:00:00

Meeting between Government Team and an SDLP delegation.

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Conclusions of the Bilateral SDLP 29 October 1992

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Conclusions of the Bilateral SDLP 29 October 1992

The SDLP wished to know the British Government's position on Strand II. Mr Fell explained the British Government would have no major role in the institutions which resulted from Strand II, although it could envisage being involved in some subjects arising in the institutions of Strand II. HMG found it difficult to see any position reached on Strand II which it would not be able to endorse. Workability was the key criteria to any North/South institutions and this meant all had to enter such institutions willingly.

The SDLP then inquired what the British Government would say to meet SDLP concerns regarding Articles 2 and 3. Both Mr Fell and Mr Thomas sought to stress that HMG had no difficulty in principle with executive authority in Strand II institutions. A statement along the lines of the following was produced, which seemed acceptable to the SDLP:

"HMG believes that any overall statement is likely to include a significant element concerning North/South relations and that this must be given institutional expression. For its part, it would be content for such institutions to have significant executive authority and capacity for dynamic development within appropriate arrangements for accountability, provided these could be agreed among the other participants."

Mr Fell [...] said that Strand II executive authority in significant areas would require either a mandate prior to Ministers' meeting or reference back to the Executive of North and South institutions thereafter. The SDLP accepted that there was a linkage and said they would put this point to Mr Hume and Mr Mallon on their return tomorrow.

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