Micheal Martin pledges to get key north-south infrastructure projects ‘over the line’

Ireland’s new taoiseach has said he will try to get key north-south infrastructure projects “over the line”.
Micheal Martin talks to the media during his visit to BelfastMicheal Martin talks to the media during his visit to Belfast
Micheal Martin talks to the media during his visit to Belfast

January’s New Decade, New Approach deal to restore Stormont power-sharing pledged to “turbo-charge” connections between Dublin and Belfast.

The Dublin government also promised to jointly funding cross-border investment on bridges, roads and canals.

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Micheal Martin visited Belfast today to meet the leaders of the devolved Stormont administration, Arlene Foster and Michelle O’Neill, and Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis.

Mr Martin said: “I will be an engaging, understanding taoiseach, trying to keep people together and trying to move forward on the economic front in particular and also in terms of getting projects over the line that we have been talking about for some time.”

It was his first visit to Northern Ireland since he was elected taoiseach last month as head of the new coalition government following February’s general election.

Irish government promises as part of January’s power-sharing deal included supporting:

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• Dualling the A5 road from the border linking Co Tyrone to Londonderry and Donegal in the Republic and supporting an Ulster Canal connection from Clones in the Republic to Upper Lough Erne in Co Fermanagh.

• Funding worth £75 million up to 2022 for the A5.

• Considering the feasibility of a high-speed rail connection between Belfast, Dublin and Cork, creating a “spine of connectivity” on the island.

• Jointly progressing options for the development of the Narrow Water bridge project at a North South Ministerial Council of ministers from Northern Ireland and the Republic.

The council will meet at Dublin Castle at the end of this month for the first time in three-and-a-half years.

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Ministers on both sides of the border have also pledged to work closely together to suppress spread of the coronavirus.

Ireland is due to announce more details about restrictions on travel next week and has seen a slight upturn in the reproductive rate of the virus.

Mr Martin said the 1998 Good Friday Agreement which enshrined the devolved institutions at Stormont and cross-border bodies was his “touchstone”.

He promised to take a pragmatic approach based on nurturing key relationships underpinning peace and reconciliation on the island.

He said he understood the need to build relations and had met with loyalists and unionists in the past.

In 2019 the SDLP agreed to enter a “partnership” with Mr Martin’s party, Fianna Fail.