Northern Ireland

UUP leader Doug Beattie warns Bobby Storey funeral row risks Stormont powersharing

 Doug Beattie is the new leader of the UUP
 Doug Beattie is the new leader of the UUP

UUP leader Doug Beattie has warned that powersharing could face a "terminal decline" if unanswered questions around the Bobby Storey funeral are not addressed.

Mr Beattie said there was a need for a judge-led inquiry to close "gaps in knowledge" around last summer's controversial event in west Belfast and the police's handling of it.

The Upper Bann MLA said questions remained over communications between Sinn Féin Policing Board member Gerry Kelly and the PSNI over the organisation of the funeral and over who was behind the stewarding of the mass event, which took place at a time when strict Covid-19 limitations on numbers were in force.

The newly elected UUP leader made the comments after what he described as an "honest and robust" meeting with Chief Constable Simon Byrne at the PSNI's headquarters in Belfast this afternoon.

"We put to him that there's an opportunity for the justice minister (Naomi Long) to be part of this and if she was to instigate a judge-led inquiry - short and sharp - looking at the issues, we could close that circle, answer some of those questions, and start to build confidence back again," he said.

"Until we do that we are going nowhere. And it's going to be a relentless drip of information over the next number of months. And while that happens, our Executive and our assembly will start to fracture and differences will be there and I have a real concern that it could be a terminal decline over this issue that should have been fixed a long time ago."

Doug Beattie highlighted how the furore over Stormont's botched Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme had built and built until it finally triggered the collapse of the institutions in January 2017.

He said he wanted to avoid history repeating itself with the Storey funeral controversy.

"What I'm saying is if there's anything out there, no matter what it is, that could lead to a separation of trust between the political parties, it could lead to damaging of the Assembly and then could ultimately lead to its collapse," he said.

"So we want to try and aim that off before it builds up momentum."

Mr Beattie's predecessor Steve Aiken had called for Simon Byrne to quit following the PPS's decision not to prosecute 24 Sinn Féin politicians who attended the funeral.

The new leader has said he retains concerns about Mr Byrne's leadership but has offered him an opportunity to rebuild confidence.

After today's meeting, Mr Beattie said Mr Byrne had insisted that he would not be quitting.

"He's going nowhere, he made that clear," he said.

"So we as a party are also clear - if he's going nowhere, we have to work with him. We've always said that we will be a constructive political party, that we will give solutions, not just look for problems.

"So we will be working with the chief constable in the months to come to try and fix this and also support the PSNI as they go about what is an incredibly difficult role."