Orkney: ‘We have been handled despicably’ by UK governments, say council chiefs amid self-governance proposals
Orkney council chiefs have denied they wish to be part of Norway as a debate rages over the island’s future inside Scotland and the UK.
Councillors, who voted on Tuesday to explore “alternative forms of governance”, stated the northern isles had been “treated despicably” by governments in London and Edinburgh.
Local officers will now put together a report on choices for a way its communities are operated sooner or later, together with wanting on the “Nordic connections” of the archipelago and crown dependencies equivalent to Jersey and Guernsey.
Downing Street has already rejected the concept Orkney might loosen ties with the UK.
Councillor Owen Tierney instructed the assembly: “I actually do suppose we have now been handled despicably.
“I have been a councillor now for 11 years and I have seen it all. It has been disappointment after disappointment”.
Orkney was underneath Norwegian and Danish management till 1472 when the islands got to Scotland as a part of Margaret of Denmark’s marriage ceremony dowry to King James III of Scotland.
The report seen by councillors on Tuesday additionally mentions the Faroe Islands – a self-governing territory of Denmark within the North Sea.
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Leader James Stockan claims his space receives much less funding per head from authorities than fellow island authorities in Shetland and the Western Isles.
He stated: “We have been held down, and what I would say is we all know most of what I could say with regard to the discrimination that we’ve had against this community from governments in the funding settlement we have.”
“This is not about us joining Norway”, he continued.
It is just not the primary time Orkney has demanded extra management over its personal affairs, notably within the wake of Brexit.
In 2017, councillors again calls to think about “whether the people of Orkney could exercise self-determination if faced with further national or international constitutional changes”.
On Monday, Scotland’s First Minister Humza Yousaf instructed reporters: “We will continue to work closely with Orkney [Islands] Council.
“I need extra autonomy for our island communities and that’s the reason I’m ready to have a look at the concept of a single island’s authority mannequin for the likes of Orkney.”
On Monday, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman told journalists there is “no mechanism for the conferral of crown dependency or abroad territory standing on any a part of the UK”, adding: “Fundamentally, we’re stronger as one United Kingdom, we have now no plans to alter that.”
Sky News has approached the Scottish authorities for remark.