John Hume, Northern Irish Catholic leader and Nobel Peace laureate, dies
at 83
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[August 03, 2020]
By Ian Graham
BELFAST (Reuters) - John Hume, a key Roman
Catholic architect of Northern Ireland's 1998 Good Friday peace
agreement who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in ending 30 years
of sectarian violence, died on Monday at the age of 83, his SDLP party
said.
Hume, a veteran civil rights campaigner credited with kick-starting
peace negotiations in a British region convulsed by bloodshed in the
early 1990s, shared the Peace Prize with Northern Ireland's then-first
minister, David Trimble of the Protestant Ulster Unionist Party.
He died in a care home in his native Londonderry in the early hours of
Monday morning, his family said.
"John Hume was a political titan; a visionary who refused to believe the
future had to be the same as the past. His contribution to peace in
Northern Ireland was epic," former British prime minister Tony Blair,
who was in office at the time of the Good Friday accord, said in a
statement.
Hume in 1968 joined a movement to protect the civil rights of the
province's pro-Irish Roman Catholic minority, fighting against
discrimination by the pro-British Protestant majority in everything from
housing to education.
As leader of the moderate Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP),
Hume was an important advocate of non-violence as fighting erupted
between Irish nationalists who wanted a united Ireland and pro-British
forces, including the British Army, who wanted to maintain the region's
British status.
By 1998 over 3,600 had died.
"Right from the outset of the Troubles, John was urging people to stick
to their objective peacefully and was constantly critical of those who
did not realise the importance of peace," Trimble told BBC Radio Ulster
on Monday, hailing Hume's "major contribution" to the peace process.
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ormer SDLP leader, John Hume, arrives for the funeral mass of former
Bishop Edward Daly at St. Eugene's Cathedral in Londonderry,
Northern Ireland August 11, 2016. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
In a pivotal breakthrough, Hume in 1993 took part in pioneering
talks with Gerry Adams, who was at the time the leader of the Sinn
Fein party that was then the political wing of the guerrilla Irish
Republican Army (IRA).
The talks helped pave the way for a joint initiative by the British
and Irish governments in 1993 that spawned a peace process and an
IRA truce in 1994 - and ultimately paved the way for the watershed
Good Friday accord four years later.
"When others were stuck in the ritual politics of condemnation John
Hume had the courage to take real risks for peace," Adams said in a
statement. "When others talked endlessly about peace John grasped
the challenge and helped make peace happen."
(Reporting by Conor Humphries in Dublin and Ian Graham in Belfast;
Editing by Kevin Liffey and Mark Heinrich)
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