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    Ireland moves to end UN veto on troop deployment

    DUBLIN (AFP) – Ireland’s Deputy Prime Minister Simon Harris said that Dublin plans to scrap a mechanism preventing the overseas deployment of Irish military peacekeepers without a United Nations (UN) green light.

    Ireland’s small, 8,500-strong defence force has traditionally engaged in international peacekeeping.

    But currently three steps – dubbed a “triple lock” – have to be taken before more than 12 members of the Irish defence forces can be sent abroad on any mission.

    Harris, who is also defence minister, said a draft proposal to change the triple lock has now been approved at Cabinet level.

    The first and second steps are green lights from the government and Parliament, with the third step – UN approval – now set to be scrapped.

    The government argues that Ireland should be able to respond to crises without waiting for approval from the UN Security Council.

    Ireland has to be “agile” and be in a position to get Irish citizens out of danger, said Harris.

    The government has become more concerned about the triple lock in recent times due to the effective veto it gives to any of the five permanent members of the UN security council – China, France, Russia, Britain and the United States – whose agreement is required to authorise resolutions.

    Removing the triple lock would be a vindication of Irish sovereignty, he said.

    Under the proposed legislation, the number of soldiers that could be deployed as part of any mission would increase from 12 to 50.

    But the triple lock is seen by opposition parties as one of the foundations of Irish military neutrality.

    Removing it was the first “dangerous” step towards abandoning neutrality, said the leftist-nationalist party Sinn Fein.

    PHOTO: AFP
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