Northern Ireland deal is 'last chapter in troubled story'

THE deal to save Northern Ireland's power-sharing government will help secure lasting peace in the region, the United States said yesterday.

US secretary of state Hillary Clinton praised the agreement unveiled by Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Taoiseach Brian Cowen, which will see policing and justice powers devolved from Westminster to Stormont by April 12.

The deal was announced with First Minister Peter Robinson and Deputy

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First Minister Martin McGuinness at Hillsborough Castle, Co Down, where the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and Sinn Fein held nearly two weeks of round-the-clock negotiations.

It meets republican demands for the transfer of law and order powers, and detailed timetables also set out a framework to meet unionist calls for a new system to oversee loyal order parades.

Mr Brown praised the settlement and said: "The achievements have been as great as they are inspirational. This moment and this agreement belongs to the people of Northern Ireland, all of the people, and now more than ever before, so does their future."

He added: "This is the last chapter of a long and troubled story and the beginning of a new chapter after decades of violence, years of talks, weeks of stalemate."

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Mr Cowen said: "That better future must be built on mutual respect for people of different traditions, equality and tolerance and respect

for each other's political aspirations and cultural expressions and inheritance."