google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

Maze Prison peace centre architect urges Stormont to end stalemate

B2c39580 154e 11f0 bb66 e5a3c361000c.jpg

Brendan Hughes

Advertisements

BBC News NI political reporter

PA Media The site of the former Maze prison near LisburnPA Media

The former Maze Prison, near Lisburn, closed in 2000

The architect behind a proposed peace centre at the former Maze Prison site has urged Stormont leaders to end their 12-year deadlock over the project.

The jail closed in 2000 and while most of the prison buildings near Lisburn have been demolished, some were listed and retained.

But £300m regeneration plans for the site have been in limbo since 2013.

Daniel Libeskind told the BBC’s The View that claims a peace centre at the former prison site would be a shrine to terrorism were “absurd”.

“How absurd those statements were, because this was absolutely the opposite of it,” he said.

The Polish-American architect oversaw the building of the 9/11 Ground Zero memorial in New York and the Jewish Museum in Berlin and says he remains committed to delivering the project in Northern Ireland.

Pacemaker Press An aerial image showing the so-called 'H-blocks' of the former Maze prison site near Lisburn

Pacemaker Press

Republican IRA and INLA inmates died during a hunger strike in the prison in 1981

The development site stretches to almost 350 acres – one of Northern Ireland’s largest in public ownership.

The high-security jail held paramilitary prisoners during the conflict in Northern Ireland known as the Troubles.

It was the site of republican hunger strikes in 1981 during which 10 inmates starved themselves to death.

Studio Libeskind An artist's impression of plans for a peace centre on the site of the former Maze prisonStudio Libeskind

An artist’s impression of plans for a peace centre on the site of the former Maze Prison

Plans for a centre for peace and conflict resolution were blocked in August 2013 by then first minister Peter Robinson from the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP).

It followed pressure from unionists who claimed the site would become a “shrine to terrorism”.

Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness, then deputy first minister, later said that no further development would take place until the dispute was resolved.

Since then, most requests to visit the prison buildings have been refused by The Executive Office – the joint department of the first and deputy first ministers.

Architect Daniel Libeskind

Architect Daniel Libeskind says Northern Ireland must move forward

Mr Libeskind told The View: “We cannot continue living with the violence and the ghosts of the past. We have to move forward.

“I’m surprised personally that Belfast cannot come together, that the conflict is still there in the political levels, which should certainly see that the world is changing around us.

“And should see that something positive should be done on that site.”

Stormont stalemate

The Maze Long Kesh Development Corporation (MLKDC) was set up to regenerate the site, which it believes could attract £800m of investment and up to 14,000 jobs.

But its work has been restricted due to the continuing political stalemate.

Its chief executive last month said its role has been “essentially limited to health and safety”.

Terence Brannigan was the former chair for the board of the Maze Long Kesh Development Corporation

Terence Brannigan was chairman of the Maze Long Kesh Development Corporation

Terence Brannigan, who chaired the MLKDC board for more than a decade, said they had tried to take decisions about the former prison “out of politics”.

He said they had proposed to The Executive Office a set of protocols to manage the prison buildings and peace centre.

“We were prepared to take that responsibility but unfortunately we weren’t given that opportunity,” he added.

Mr Brannigan said the site has “massive potential in terms of jobs, in terms of economy, and in terms of bringing prosperity to Northern Ireland”.

He said it was “shameful for us as a collective, for us, this community” that the site “has not delivered what it is capable of delivering for our people here”.

See also  Cookstown: Investigation over claims PSNI officer kicked teen
Aircraft on display in hangars on the Maze Long Kesh site near Lisburn

Aircraft are on display in hangars at the old Maze site

The annual agricultural event the Balmoral Show is held at the site and the air ambulance and Ulster Aviation Society (UAS) are also based there.

UAS manager Ray Burrows said it has “absolutely fantastic potential”.

“I see the potential that has come with us being here and I see no reason why anybody who comes here cannot realise the same potential,” he said.

“If there was a collection of things to come and see, there’d be tens of thousands of people visiting this site annually.”

You can watch The View on BBC One Northern Ireland and iPlayer on Thursday at 22:40 BST.


BBC News

Views: 0

See also  Simon Harris commits to 'honour trust' as taoiseach

Check Also

BBC annual report: Stephen Nolan again among best paid presenters

Nolan’s show Peelers, for instance, is also made for the BBC by his independent production …

Irish government to apologise to victims of Bill Kenneally

He had no further contact from gardaí until 2012 when a complaint was made by …

Ballymena: Forensic examinations continue after three found dead

Forensic examinations are continuing at a house in Ballymena where three people were found dead …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime
elfbar elfliq with 10 mg/ml nicotine. elfbar elfa kit.