Sinn Fein demands new Stormont poll if agreement not reached by Friday

Another Stormont election should be called after Friday, Sinn Fein urged.
Michelle O'Neill and the Sinn Fein team at Stormont todayMichelle O'Neill and the Sinn Fein team at Stormont today
Michelle O'Neill and the Sinn Fein team at Stormont today

The party said there was little prospect of agreement on the way forward amid faltering talks with the DUP and British Government on restoring the power-sharing institutions.

Good Friday is the deadline for a deal and Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire said he would make a call on the state of negotiations over the Easter weekend to enable him to move Westminster legislation once MPs return from recess on April 18.

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Sinn Fein's leader at Stormont Michelle O'Neill said: "We remain committed to trying to deal with the issues which are there.

Michelle O'NeillMichelle O'Neill
Michelle O'Neill

"We have set out what we need to see delivery on and we need to see a different approach from the DUP and, indeed, from the British Government.

"But post-Friday I think it is over to the electorate to have their say about the future.

"But clearly Sinn Fein want to make these institutions work, but they have to work for all our citizens."

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After Friday Mr Brokenshire will have to consider legislating to pass a budget for public spending in Northern Ireland and could introduce direct rule by ministers from Great Britain.

Michelle O'NeillMichelle O'Neill
Michelle O'Neill

Mrs O'Neill replaced Martin McGuinness as the party's most senior politician in Northern Ireland.

She reiterated Sinn Fein's demand that DUP leader Arlene Foster could not be a Stormont minister until the public inquiry into the renewable heat incentive (RHI) had been delivered.

Mrs Foster was the minister who oversaw the introduction of the botched green energy scheme predicted to cost the taxpayer around £490 million.

Mrs O'Neill briefed media at Stormont.

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She said: "We are at a critical period and without delivery and addressing those fundamental issues there is very little prospect of achieving a political agreement here on the way forward."

Two of the main stumbling blocks are the contentious issues of Irish language protections and how to deal with the toxic legacy of Troubles killings.

The Democratic Unionists have accused the republican party of peddling "doom and gloom" and questioned whether it was actually committed to the restoration of devolution.

The two main parties are taking part in discussions along with Stormont's other three main parties, the Ulster Unionists, SDLP and Alliance Party, and the UK and Irish governments.

Devolution crashed in January over a row about the DUP's handling of the RHI.