Northern Ireland

Peter Hain: Northern Ireland legislation 'direct rule in all but name'

Former Secretary of State Peter Hain has hit out at the Tory government's commitment to the north. File picture by Colm O'Reilly
Former Secretary of State Peter Hain has hit out at the Tory government's commitment to the north. File picture by Colm O'Reilly Former Secretary of State Peter Hain has hit out at the Tory government's commitment to the north. File picture by Colm O'Reilly

FORMER Secretary of State Peter Hain has said the British Government legislating for Northern Ireland in the absence of an executive amounts to "direct rule in all but name".

The Labour peer said Theresa May's "fly in-fly out diplomacy" in Stormont's powersharing crisis was never going to work and he did not believe her administration "gets" the north.

Lord Hain was speaking as peers debated legislation on devolved matters amid the continuing deadlock at Stormont.

One Bill relates to the budget, while another sets regional rates for next year and continues a cap on the costs of the botched Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme.

A third will enable the Secretary of State to make a decision on MLAs' pay.

Karen Bradley has indicated she intends to slash assembly members' pay by 27.5% but has said the wages of their staff will not be cut.

In the face of the continuing impasse at Stormont, Lord Hain said: "I have heard nothing from the Government that they have a clue what to do.

"I do not really think this Government gets Northern Ireland.

"The Prime Minister's approach, which is a kind of fly in-fly out diplomacy, of insufficient in-depth, detailed negotiation and relationship building with all of the parties in Northern Ireland, was never going to work.

"You cannot achieve success in an impasse like we face with this kind of approach. I do urge the Government to reconsider this.

"The measures in these Bills should never have had to come to us in the first place. They represent direct rule in all but name."

Lord Hain also pressed for the Government to take action on providing pensions for victims of the Troubles, which he said would cost up to £5 million a year, reducing over time.

He said: "I appeal to the Government to provide this money now. It is a small amount to rectify a big injustice.

"If the devolved institutions are for whatever reason unable to deliver on this - and of course suspended they are unable to deliver on this ... then the Government at Westminster must surely step in now.

"Because it would be shameful if the people who have suffered so much through no fault of their own were told that nothing can be done because of political buck-passing."

Liberal Democrat Northern Ireland spokesman Baroness Suttie said: "The fact that these Bills continue to be necessary is deeply to be regretted.

"The Bills before us are little more than sticking plaster Bills, which do little to provide clarity on the priorities for the months or years ahead."

However, she supported the legislation "as another necessary measure to ensure the continuation of budgetary certainty in Northern Ireland".

DUP peer Lord Morrow said the RHI scheme was "undoubtedly a flawed project", but questioned whether it justified "pulling the whole edifice of the assembly and executive apart".

He claimed it had been used by Sinn Féin as "a device" to paralyse the executive.

Former Ulster Unionist Party leader Lord Empey urged the Government to ensure the implementation of recommendations from an inquiry into historical child abuse, including the payment of compensation to survivors.

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry, chaired by Sir Anthony Hart, filed its report around the time the executive collapsed.

Lord Empey said: "Having fought for years to get this inquiry, the victims are now being subjected to a second, if different, form of abuse.

"They have no executive in place in Belfast to ratify the inquiry report and nobody is planning to implement its findings. This is totally unacceptable."

He argued the issue should be treated as "a humanitarian measure" which had unanimous political support.