Sinn Féin to boycott US St Patrick’s Day celebrations over Donald Trump stance
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BBC News NI
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When power-sharing is functioning, it is custom for the first and deputy first ministers to make the trip to Washington DC.
In a video posted on the social media platform X, McDonald said she had followed the president’s comments on Gaza with “growing concern” and had listened in “horror” to calls for “mass expulsion of the Palestinian people from their homes and the permanent seizure of Palestinian lands”.
“Such an approach is a fundamental breach of international law, is deeply destabilising in the Middle East and a dangerous departure from the UN position of peace and security for both Palestinians and Israelis and the right of Palestinians to self-determination,” she added.
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At a press conference following the announcement, McDonald added that the US is a “valued friend” of Ireland, with strong peace ties and role in the Irish economy.
However, the Sinn Féin president said the current US administration is “catastrophically wrong” on Palestine.
“I have made a decision not to attend events in the White House this year as a principled stance against the call for the mass expulsion of the Palestinian people from Gaza,” she said.
“The only route to peace and security is a permanent ceasefire followed by a negotiation settlement which guarantees peace and security for both Palestinians and Israelis through a just and sustainable two state solution and that should be the solution of the US.”
McDonald also called on Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Micheál Martin to use the celebrations as an opportunity to reflect the views of the Irish people in relation to Palestine in support of International law.
What did Trump say about Gaza?
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O’Neill said she had spoken to Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly on Friday morning to inform her of the decision.
“It is absolutely her call in terms of what she may decide to do,” she added.
“For me this about taking a principled stand this is about a moment in time a moment in history when we will all reflect on what we did and this is an opportunity to take a stand for the Palestinian people.”
‘They went when the war was on’
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) MP Gregory Campbell has said Sinn Féin’s decision will leave his party’s deputy first minister “in the position of making Northern Irelands’ case alone instead of a unified approach to try and get greater investment”.
He told BBC Radio Ulster’s Talkback programme it was a boycott of an “invite that hasn’t been extended yet”.
The East Londonderry MP also criticised Sinn Féin’s decision to visit the White House last year.
“Now there’s a ceasefire they’re saying if they get an invite they’re not going to go, that’s the reality, you can dress it up, you can slice it, you can do whatever you like, they went when the war was on”.
Why do politicians travel to Washington?
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Last week, SDLP leader Claire Hanna said her party would decline an invite to the White House over the president’s stance on Gaza.
She told BBC Radio Ulster’s Talkback programme that she could not “in good conscience” attend as people have made their hopes and fears for the Palestinian people clear.
It is the second year in a row the party have said it would turn down an invitation to St Patrick’s Day celebrations.
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) assembly member David Brooks described the SDLP’s decision as a “petulant stunt”.
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