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Elizabeth II's historic meeting

June 27, 2012

Queen Elizabeth II has been meeting leaders on both sides of Northern Ireland's sectarian divide. Her latest trip includes a historic meeting with Republican militant-turned-politician Martin McGuinness.

https://p.dw.com/p/15Lp5
Britain's Queen Elizabeth smiles as she leaves the South West Acute Hospital in Enniskillen on the first day of a two day tour of Northern Ireland
Image: Reuters

The British monarch on Tuesday prayed with Catholic and Protestant community leaders at a service in the town of Enniskillen, site of a 1987 bomb attack that claimed 11 lives.

As well as meeting survivors of the IRA attack, the queen visited a Roman Catholic church - the first time she has done so in 20 visits to Northern Ireland.

Queen Elizabeth II had arrived in the province earlier in the day, ahead of a historic meeting with Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland Martin McGuinness on Wednesday.

Geste der Versöhnung - Queen in Nordirland # eliza22b # 26.06.2012 23 Uhr # Journal Englisch

The meeting with McGuinness - a former commander of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) - is being seen by some as the culmination of a peace process that has taken more than two decades to achieve.

During the four-decade conflict, in which Republicans fought for a united Ireland ruled from Dublin, some 3,600 people on both sides of the religious and political divide were killed.

The Provisional IRA's campaign of violence alone claimed some 1,755 lives during the period commonly referred to as "the troubles." Among the victims was the queen's own cousin, Lord Louis Mountbatten, in 1979.

Only last year, McGuinness' party, Irish nationalists Sinn Fein, turned down an invitation to be present during the queen's first-ever visit to the Irish Republic.

rc/ncy (AP, Reuters)