[quote name='Owen' date='Mar 13 2010, 10:24 AM']
On first inspection, like 'the straw', I thought that there was a contradiction between the second and first parts of this. Actually, looking closer, I think we have a demonstration of the type of thinking which might allow the IFA to play the 'tolerant' card and come out as a winner. It's precisely what I'm talking about in the first instance.
1) My 'personal prejudices' are underpinned by UK citizenship law.
2) What this character is trying to say is that ROI citizenship is held singularly by nationalists in Northern Ireland and British citizenship is not conferred automatically upon those born here. However, if they want to, for instance, play for Northern Ireland, they are making an explicit declaration of British citizenship.
If the FAI go to the CAS and argue this then IFA should certainly invoke the Belfast Agreement in its favour. The GFA's very essence is that people should be equally entitled to play a full role IN NORTHERN IRELAND, irrespective of their identity or political allegiance. Unlike the ROI, the NI team has always included players irrespective of their politics or religion. No argument could demonstrate more clearly the will to politicise and segregate Irish football.
He is wrong, but he is not entirely wrong. The northern players who hold southern passports ARE actually dual citizens, due to the territorial basis of British citizenship law and the extraterritorial, irredentist basis of ROI citizenship law. Are the FAI prepared to argue on that basis? Or on the basis that ROI citizens, who satisfy the territorial tests of eligibility for NI, can only play for our team if they acknowledge that they are British?
That's what the IFA have to find out. The whole purpose of this group is to highlight the fact that the FAI needs to be forced to argue this on the basis of a very intolerant position. :clapping:
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