By Ben Kerrigan-
King Charles promised to achieve healing and unify divisions in a manner that achieves the welfare of all the inhabitants of Northern Ireland. He was addressing the region’s assembly yesterday on his visit to Hillsborough Castle to meet the public and politicians.
In a speech that promised healing indicative of providing the leadership of a king, he appeared to be addressing the longstanding issues surrounding the Northern Irish Boarder and the Good Friday Agreement, King Charles promised to provide a degree of leadership that takes into account the people of Ireland, given the tension created by the dispute over the Brexit deal.
The 1998 Good Friday agreement paved the way for the Queen’s landmark visit to the Republic of Ireland in 2011, when she spoke Irish and made gestures of reconciliation
After being greeted by crowds chanting “God save the King” at the gates of the royal residence in County Down, he appeared to commit to healing in response to a message of condolence from Alex Maskey, the nationalist Speaker of the Northern Ireland assembly and a former IRA internee.
King Charles spoke of uniting groups separated by history and fulfilling the vision of his mother.
“My mother felt deeply, I know, the significance of the role she herself played in bringing together those whom history had separated and in extending a hand to make possible the healing of long-held hurts,” the King told Maskey, a Sinn Féin member of the Stormont parliament representing West Belfast.
“The Queen made a pledge to dedicate herself to her country and her people, and to maintain the principles of constitutional government. This promise she kept with steadfast faith. Now, with that shining example before me, and with God’s help, I take up my new duties resolved to seek the welfare of all the inhabitants of Northern Ireland.”
In an exchange in Hillsborough Castle’s throne room, Maskey said to the King: “We can of course never forget that over the last decades, too many have experienced tragedy and sorrow which will never leave them.”
He said the Queen’s “recognition of both British and Irish citizens, as well as the wider diversity of our community, was undoubtedly significant”.
Leadership
Maskey added: “As we remember Queen Elizabeth’s positive leadership, let us all reflect that such leadership is still needed. And let us be honest with ourselves enough to recognise that too often that leadership has been lacking when [it] has been most required.”
Nationalist leaders played a major role in the events at Hillsborough on Tuesday after the King and Camilla, the Queen Consort, arrived by plane from Edinburgh, where Charles had stood vigil beside the Queen’s coffin at St Giles’ Cathedral.
Michelle O’Neill, Sinn Féin’s leader in Northern Ireland and the first minister designate were among a small group of political leaders to meet him in private. It was reported that he asked her and Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, the leader of the Democratic Unionist party, about the Northern Ireland assembly and its current impasse, and questioned Donaldson on the EU and issues surrounding the Northern Ireland protocol.
Last month, O’Neill prompted anger among unionist leaders when, after being asked about the IRA’s armed struggle, she said: “I think at the time, there was no alternative.” O’Neill added: “Thankfully, we have an alternative to conflict and that’s the Good Friday agreement, and that’s why it’s so precious to us all.”
The King also held a private meeting with the new Northern Ireland secretary, Chris Heaton-Harris.
Donaldson, speaking before his meeting with the King, said: “It is an indication of how far we have travelled in Northern Ireland. I think this would not have been possible and it wouldn’t have happened during the dark days of our troubled past. Of course, we still have a long way to go, but it is a sign of political maturity.”
He said the King, like the Queen, would have a role in “promoting reconciliation”. Allister, the leader of the Traditional Unionist Voice party, said: “I will say that I trust that early in his reign, the UK’s sovereignty will be fully restored in respect of Northern Ireland.
“In other words, the protocol which treats Great Britain as a foreign country, which subjects us to foreign laws … that would be replaced by the restoration of full British sovereignty.”
After he arrived from George Best airport in Belfast, the King spent 10 minutes greeting crowds outside the gates of Hillsborough Castle.
He laughed and smiled as he and the Queen Consort accepted good wishes and bouquets of flowers, but one woman who offered condolences said he told her: “I don’t wish this on anybody.”
The King reportedly made the remark in reference to losing his mother after Ingrid Graham, 36, who owns a nail business, said to him: “I’m sorry for your loss, Your Majesty.”
Catherine Rogers, 41, the leader of the 1st Hillsborough Scout Group’s Squirrels group, which gave Charles a drawing of a rainbow and a corgi made by six-year-old Luca, said: “I think he’s doing his duty. I lost my mum recently and I wouldn’t want all this media.”
A service of remembrance for the Queen was held later at St Anne’s Cathedral in Belfast. It gave the Irish and British governments a chance to set aside, temporarily at least, their post-Brexit divisions.