Queen hails Irish peace efforts at historic state dinner



LONDON, James Pheby- Queen Elizabeth II on Tuesday welcomed the Irish president to Britain for the first time since the republic became independent with a banquet, controversially attended by former IRA commander Martin Guinness.
The Windsor Castle dinner, attended by British Prime Minister David Cameron and a host of celebrities, was thrown as part of Irish President Michael D. Higgins's state visit as the once-hostile neighbours seek to consolidate their improving ties.



The historic state visit builds on the Queen's groundbreaking visit to Ireland in 2011, which helped put British-Irish relations on a new footing.
Shortly after guests took their seats at 8:40 pm (1940 GMT), the monarch welcomed Higgins to Britain and expressed her hopes for a "more settled future" between the two nations.
The presence of Northern Ireland's deputy first minister and ex-IRA commander McGuinness at the banquet was seen as particularly significant, as he snubbed a banquet in the Queen's honour in Dublin three years ago.
As a commander in the Irish Republican Army, McGuinness played a key role in the Troubles -- the three decades of sectarian violence between Northern Ireland's British Protestants and Irish Catholics.
The Sinn Fein politician made the psychological leap of meeting the Queen in Belfast in 2012.
Higgins earlier hailed the warm ties between the two nations, which he said once seemed "unachievable".
Addressing both houses of parliament in London, Higgins said Ireland's bloody fight for independence from Britain, gained in 1922, "inevitably casts its long shadow across our relations".
But the Queen's visit in 2011 had shown that where Britain and the republic once looked at each other with "doubtful eyes", they could now view each other "through trusting eyes and mutual respect and shared commitment".
In his speech at the Palace of Westminster, he said: "The relationship between our two islands has, as I have said, achieved a closeness and warmth that once seemed unachievable."
- 'Dependable neighbours' -
Higgins, the first Irish president to make a state visit to Britain since independence in 1922, and his wife Sabina were earlier treated to a spectacular ceremonial welcome in Windsor, west of London, comprising gun salutes and a glittering military parade involving 850 soldiers and 275 horses.
After a private lunch, the 72-year-old president returned to London and laid a wreath at the Grave of the Unknown Soldier at Westminster Abbey.
His show of remembrance for the British military's fallen is highly symbolic, given the long history of the army in quelling dissent in Ireland.
The Queen spoke warmly of her 2011 visit before the evening banquet in Windsor Castle's grand Saint George's Hall, where the menu included halibut, tornadoes of Windsor estate beef and vanilla ice-cream bombe with Balmoral redcurrant centre.
"Prince Philip and I recall our visit to Ireland with great pleasure," she told guests, who included actors Judi Dench and Daniel Day-Lewis.
"Your people's famous hospitality -- and, of course, Ireland's thoroughbred horses -- all these and much more left a happy and enduring impression."
She said the visits showed the two nations were becoming "good and dependable neighbours and better friends" who could look forward to a "more settled future".
"After so much chequered history, the avoidable and regrettable pain of which is still felt by many of us, this goal is now within reach," she added.
The violence in Northern Ireland was largely ended by the 1998 Good Friday peace accords, which paved the way for a power-sharing government in Belfast, but only after an estimated 3,500 people died.
Political relations between Britain and Ireland have steadily improved since then, building on a shared history, personal connections and strong trade between the two countries.
For some, however, the pace of change is too rapid.
Stephen Gault, whose father was killed by an IRA bomb in 1987, said that the presence of McGuinness at Windsor was "another nail in the coffin of the innocent victims".
"If Sinn Fein/IRA want peace, why don't they come forward now and tell the authorities who was responsible for these heinous crimes in the past," he told BBC radio.
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Wednesday, April 9th 2014
James Pheby
           


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