MSFT 408.77 -5.4933% AAPL 227.085 -1.3103% NVDA 132.5201 -4.891% GOOGL 171.3 -1.8113% GOOG 172.8692 -1.8569% AMZN 185.36 -3.824% META 564.34 -4.6401% AVGO 168.15 -4.8064% TSLA 249.66 -3.0635% TSM 189.54 -2.5401% LLY 839.61 -0.8526% V 289.94 -0.0758% JPM 222.65 -0.7843% UNH 567.9925 0.8939% NVO 111.63 -1.4218% WMT 82.03 0.7863% LVMUY 132.48 -1.1269% XOM 117.11 0.3599% LVMHF 664.31 -1.3484% MA 501.1476 -2.4416%
General news
Alastair Campbell plays bagpipes lament for late Good Friday Agreement figures
Image Source: PAMEDIA
Former Downing Street communications chief Alastair Campbell has played a lament on the bagpipes for political divs who were involved in the Good Friday Agreement negotiations but have since died.
His performance came at the end of a live recording of The Rest Is Politics podcast, which took place in the Whitla Hall at Queen’s University Belfast as part of the Agreement 25 conference marking a quarter of a century since the peace deal.
“I’m actually in my dotage, started to write… and I’m going to play a lament,” Mr Campbell said.
“And it is a lament to Mo (Mowlam), John Hume, Seamus Mallon, David Trimble, David Ervine, and two gentlemen better known as the Chuckle Brothers (Rev Ian Paisley and Martin McGuiness), because at various points they were all involved and they are sadly no longer with us.”
Mr Campbell was chief press secretary at the time of the peace deal negotiations in 1998.
During the course of the live recording, Mr Campbell discussed forthcoming podcast episodes featuring former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton and former prime minister Tony Blair.
“We’ve also done an interview with Hillary Clinton,” he said.
“Both she and Tony (Blair) separately made the same point, which I think is something here for the PhD students to think about – would it have been achieved in the way that it was in an era of social media? I’m not convinced.”
Podcast co-host Rory Stewart, a former cabinet minister, also expressed apprehension about the impact of social media.
“Others have been talking about social media, and the way in which instant tweeting could undermine these kinds of processes,” he said.
“But I think that same form of social media has increased populism and polarisation around the world, as undermining the authority of the United States, its Western allies, we’ve seen the rise of China.”
He added: “It’s very, very difficult now to see the re-emergence of peace processes and the global order.”