The Eire Nua program,
initially proposed by Republican Sinn Fein in 1972, would as a
basic requirement, reunite the British occupied six counties of
Ireland with the rest of Ireland in an all-Ireland federation
comprised of the four historic provinces of Ulster, Munster,
Leinster and Connacht. This comprehensive and far-reaching
program is in stark contrast to British imposed arrangements
such as the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, Sunningdale,
Hillsborough and the Good Friday Agreement, all calculated to
copper-fasten and legitimize British control over the occupied
six counties of Ireland.
The British imposed Government of Ireland Act of 1920 coupled
with the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 partitioned the Irish nation
into two dominion states of the British Empire, the 26-county
Irish Free State and the six-county Northern Ireland State. This
British enforced arrangement was the most insidious of all the
treacherous acts perpetrated on the Irish nation, it not only
divided Ireland; it also divided its people. As a consequence,
it denied the people of different religions and traditions the
opportunity to work together to build a nation in which they
both could prosper and live in peace. Instead, as intended this
insidious arrangement perpetuated direct British control over
the occupied six counties and indirect control over the
twenty-six county Irish Free State.
Any political program that does not include the reunification
of the Irish nation as a prerequisite is meaningless and doomed
to failure from the start.
The Eire Nua program authored by the late Daithi O'Conaill,
Ruairi O'Bradaigh and others is visionary in concept and far
reaching in that it includes all of Ireland. It offers a
solution that guarantees equality and the maximum distribution
of authority at provincial and subsidiary levels in a unitary
federal system comprising the four provinces of Ireland. It
views the war in the North not as a religious conflict but as an
ongoing effort to remove the last vestiges of colonialism. It
sets forth specific conditions to start the process of
reconciliation and unity including;
A British declaration of intent to withdraw from Ireland,
The convening of a constitutional convention to draft a new
all-Ireland constitution
The unconditional release of all political prisoners, and 4) a
British withdrawal.
The proposed all-Ireland constitution embodies the following
fundamental principles,
A Charter of Rights that would clearly define the rights and
privileges to be accorded to each and every individual.
New Governments Structures that would embody a system of power
sharing administered at the national, provincial, county /
district government levels.
The Separation of Church and State would guarantee the various
religious denominations the freedom to attend to the spiritual
needs of their adherents. By the same token, the government
would not be in the business of legislating morality.
An Independent Judiciary that would
ensure that the nations' Supreme Court, as guardian of the
constitution, would have equal status to the legislative and
executive branches of government. The judicial power of the
nation would be vested in the Supreme Court.
The NIFC consider the Eire Nua
program to be innovative and far-reaching and believes it to
be a positive approach
that recognizes the rights of all Irish people, irrespective
of their ancestry or religious affiliations. For this reason
the NIFC has adopted and will promote Eire Nua
as the most logical choice to achieve a lasting peace for
Ireland. We believe that this program is based on sound and
honorable principles incorporating fair and realistic plans
to achieve national unity within the framework of a
32-county Irish Republic.