Britain and Ireland said on Friday they would push ahead with plans to restore self-rule in Northern Ireland even though the province's two main parties gave only partial support to the deal by the deadline.
The governments face an uphill battle in keeping to the timetable for devolution because the pro-British Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) and the Irish nationalist Sinn Fein are deadlocked over the key issues of policing and power-sharing. London and Dublin last month gave the two feuding parties until November 10 to back plans, drawn up after talks in St. Andrews, Scotland, for reviving an assembly in which they must share power despite their opposing visions of the future.
"The governments have been in contact with the parties. We are satisfied from these contacts that the St Andrews Agreement, implemented in good faith, represents the basis for a political settlement," the governments said in a joint statement. "We will now proceed to ensure full implementation of the St Andrews Agreement."
Under the agreement assembly members must elect a first and deputy-first minister from the two biggest opposing parties to lead the power-sharing executive by November 24 and self-rule will be fully restored by March 2007.
Failure to meet the deadlines will mean continued direct rule from London, but with a greater input from Dublin - a prospect pro-British "unionists" find unpalatable.
The DUP, Northern Ireland's biggest party which wants the province to remain part of the United Kingdom, said on Thursday it would not commit itself to sharing power with its old enemy Sinn Fein until it agreed to support the local police force.
Sinn Fein, which ultimately wants a united Ireland, has long viewed Northern Ireland's police force as an arm of the British state and wants a clear timetable on transferring control over policing and justice in the province from London to Belfast.
Three decades of violence in which 3,600 people died largely ended with paramilitary cease-fires ahead of the US-brokered Good Friday agreement in 1998, but political bodies set up under the deal operated only fitfully before being suspended in 2002.
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