Do you want to go straight to a particular resource? Use the Jump Tool and follow 2 steps:
This can usually be found in the top hero section of overview, delegations visualize, session visualize, event visualize, commentary collection, commentary item, resource collection, and resource item pages.
Enter the shortcut code for the page that you wish to search for.
These documents were scanned, collated and catalogued by Ruth Murray, Annabel Harris, Isha Pareek, Eleanor Williams, Antoine Yenk, Harriet Carter, Rosa Moore, Oliver Nicholls, Kieran Wetherwick, and Cerys Griffiths.
Collection associations (1)
Already have an account? Login here
Don't have an account? Register here
Forgot your password? Click here to reset it
None
Copyright
None
Physical Copy Information
None
Digital Copy Information
None
R J Sawers Esq
Principal Private Secretary
Foreign Office
15 March 1993
Dear John,
VISIT OF THE NEW ZEALAND PRIME MINISTER TO NORTHERN IRELAND
My Secretary of State gave dinner to the New Zealand Prime Minister, Mr Bolger, on Friday night at Hillsborough. Before dinner the Prime Minister and the Secretary of State spent an hour and a quarter discussing the present situation in Northern Ireland. The Prime Minister was accompanied by Mr Simon Murdoch, Head of the New Zealand Prime Minister and Cabinet Office.
My Secretary of State gave Mr Bolger a candid account of the political development process. He remained hopeful that it would be possible to get back into talks once the District Council elections on 19 May were over but realistically there was not going to be real progress before then, even though it were not yet prudent to say so publicly. Mr Bolger said that the Taoiseach had told him exactly the same in Dublin.
As to the eventual prospects the Secretary of State said that he was hopeful but not optimistic. The arrival of Mr Spring, who understood Northern Ireland well and had just made a very positive and thoughtful speech, was welcome. Nevertheless, the Unionists were in a very fragile mood. They feared that Dublin and the SDLP would always hold out for more than they were able to concede.
The Secretary of State said that the Unionists might well be proved right in believing that a comprehensive settlement was too ambitious at this stage. Temperamentally he had a lot of sympathy with the argument for a step by step, case law type approach rather than attempting to reflect great principles from the outset in the institutions which were established. But even a partial settlement had to have a North/South dimension: it was not going to be acceptable to Dublin or the Nationalists merely to go for internal change within Northern Ireland.
There was a general discussion of the scope for actions outside the political field to help diminish sectarian attitudes. The New Zealand Prime Minister expressed particular interest in progress with integrated education and in the scope for using sport to help break barriers down.
Mr Bolger spoke very positively of his impressions from having visited parts of Belfast earlier in the day. He had come with images of the Falls Road in the 1970s and had found something very different. A lot of the new housing development compared very favourably indeed with what could be found in New Zealand's cities. In general he thought that "Northern Ireland was in better shape than it had been for years". It might just be that the moment would come in a few months' time when London, Dublin and Belfast would at last be able to reach a pragmatic and wide-ranging solution.
The Secretary of State thanked Mr Bolger for the welcome support of New Zealand for the International Fund for Ireland. Mr Bolger said that some eyebrows had been raised in New Zealand over the need for the money. But it was very much an investment in hope for the future and from his visit on both sides of the border he had been extremely impressed by the sort of projects which he had seen. As a Catholic from a County Wexford family he saw an historic inevitability in the achievement of a united Ireland. But all that could be done in the short and medium term was to plug away slowly, steadily and patiently at the work of reconciliation.
A copy of this letter goes to Roderic Lyne and to Melanie Leech.
W R FITTALL
Private Secretary
26
22
62
61 1997 - 1997
84 1996 - 1997
112 1997 - 1997
4 1997
70 1997 - 1997
85 1997 - 1997
52 1997 - 1997
65 1992 - 1997
3
109 1997 - 1997
89 1997 - 1997
83 1997 - 1997
57 1992 - 1997
68 1997 - 1997
94 1997 - 1997
74 1997 - 1997
68 1997 - 1997
53 1997 - 1997
125 1995 - 1998
107 1996 - 1998
131 1998 - 1998
86 1998 - 1998
38 1991 - 1991
61 1991 - 1992
48 1992 - 1993
58 1993 - 1993
59 1993 - 1993
84 1993 - 1993
134 1993 - 1994
48 1996 - 1996
43 1996 - 1996
86 1996 - 1996
79 1996 - 1996
78 1996 - 1996
55 1996 - 1996
86 1996 - 1996
20 1996 - 1996
22 1996 - 1996
17 1996 - 1996
69 1996 - 1996
31 1996 - 1996
64 1996 - 1996
96 1992 - 1997
79 1996 - 1997
58 1996 - 1997
117 1996 - 1997
46 1997 - 1997
49 1996 - 1997
27 1988 - 1990
8 1989 - 1990
55 1990 - 1991
64 1991 - 1991
60 1993 - 1994
77 1993 - 1993
64 1993 - 1993
49 1993 - 1995
54 1993 - 1993
57 1993 - 1993
59 1993 - 1993
51 1993 - 1993
26 1993 - 1993
38 1993 - 1993
65 1993 - 1993
37 1993 - 1993
32 1993 - 1993
18 1993 - 1993
24 1993 - 1994
41 1993 - 1994
76 1993 - 1994
32 1993 - 1994
72 1993 - 1994
1 1994
33 1996 - 1996
14 1996 - 1997
4 1996 - 1996
41 1996 - 1996
33 1996 - 1996
30 1996 - 1996
7 1996 - 1996
24 1996 - 1996
17 1996 - 1996
9 1996 - 1996
59 1996 - 1996
73 1996 - 1996
71 1996 - 1996
54 1996 - 1996
22 1996 - 1996
53 1996 - 1996
77 1996 - 1996
67 1996 - 1996
66 1996 - 1996
49 1996 - 1996
20 1996 - 1997
32 1996 - 1996
47 1996 - 1996
34 1996 - 1996
37 /196 - 1996
31 1996 - 1996
45 1996 - 1996
33 196 - 1996
60 1996 - 1996
77 1996 - 1996
6 1996 - 1997
39 1996 - 1996
14 1996 - 1996
14 1996 - 1996
11 1996 - 1996
61 1996 - 1996
23 1996 - 1996
16 1996 - 1996
William Fittall records a discussion between Patrick Mayhew and the Prime Minister of New Zealand about the situation in Northern Ireland. Mayhew mentioned British fears that constitutional nationalists were not willing to compromise fully and that Unionists were in a fragile mood as a result. The merits of an incremental agreement process over a sweeping early declaration were discussed, but it was noted that including a North/South dimension was crucial. Projects beyond the political process such as bridging the divide through sport were also discussed.
N/A
N/A
Unless further or otherwise specified below, this material falls under Crown Copyright and contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
The National Archives of the UK (TNA), digitized by the Quill Project at https://quillproject.net/resource_collections/351/.