Mark Carney pays tribute to John de Chastelain in Dublin lecture
By Cillian Sherlock, Press Association
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has paid tribute to a general who “helped forge” Northern Ireland’s peace process.
Carney was speaking at the inaugural de Chastelain Public Lecture at Trinity College Dublin (TCD) as part of his two-day visit to Ireland.
The lecture is named after Canadian General John de Chastelain, who was head of the international body charged with decommissioning paramilitary arms in Northern Ireland.

He was present in the university’s examination Hall as Carney said it was an “honour” to be speaking under the banner of his name.
Carney said: “After a lifetime of service, General John de Chastelain’s seminal work helped forge and implement the Good Friday Agreement.
“Peace is never guaranteed. It cannot simply be signed into reality.
“It is brokered, and built, and embodied by brave and compassionate individuals like General de Chastelain.”
Carney said de Chastelain “imagined better possibilities that others did not see”.
He added: “He was ambitious. He understood the power of connection, obligation, and trust.
“For us, gathered here to honour his legacy, this is our charge: We must imagine better possibilities, we must recognise the importance of our shared world view and weave webs of connection, obligation, and trust – across borders and generations.”
Referencing the words of Trinity alumnus Edmund Burke, Carney added: “If we can do this, if we build together and with his ambition, we can arrive at a future worthy of ‘those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born’.”

