cancel2 2022
Canceled
This really does come into the 'you just couldn't make it up' category. Words fail me.
Former IRA commander Martin McGuinness will be a special guest of the Queen during a state banquet at Windsor Castle, it has been confirmed.
Northern Ireland's First Minister will also attend other events organised by Her Majesty in London during the historic official visit by Irish president Michael D Higgins to the UK next week.
The Sinn Fein politician, who refused to sit in the House of Commons as an MP because it required an oath of allegiance to the Queen, snubbed a gala banquet in her honour at Dublin Castle in 2011. Last month, it was reported he was considering whether to accept the offer, but in a statement, Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams confirmed Mr McGuinness would be visiting Windsor Castle.
'While Martin McGuinness's involvement in President Higgins's state visit may not be welcome by opponents of change, it is yet another example of Sinn Fein's commitment to an inclusive future based on tolerance and equality,' he said. 'This decision may cause difficulty for some Irish republicans in light of ongoing difficulties in the north (of Ireland) but I would appeal to them to view this positively in the context of republican and democratic objectives and the interests of unity and peace on this island.'
A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: 'There is a long-standing practice of not commenting in individual invitations.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...een-Windsor-Castle-banquet.html#ixzz2y6pMvTjA
Former IRA commander Martin McGuinness will be a special guest of the Queen during a state banquet at Windsor Castle, it has been confirmed.
Northern Ireland's First Minister will also attend other events organised by Her Majesty in London during the historic official visit by Irish president Michael D Higgins to the UK next week.
The Sinn Fein politician, who refused to sit in the House of Commons as an MP because it required an oath of allegiance to the Queen, snubbed a gala banquet in her honour at Dublin Castle in 2011. Last month, it was reported he was considering whether to accept the offer, but in a statement, Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams confirmed Mr McGuinness would be visiting Windsor Castle.
'While Martin McGuinness's involvement in President Higgins's state visit may not be welcome by opponents of change, it is yet another example of Sinn Fein's commitment to an inclusive future based on tolerance and equality,' he said. 'This decision may cause difficulty for some Irish republicans in light of ongoing difficulties in the north (of Ireland) but I would appeal to them to view this positively in the context of republican and democratic objectives and the interests of unity and peace on this island.'
A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: 'There is a long-standing practice of not commenting in individual invitations.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...een-Windsor-Castle-banquet.html#ixzz2y6pMvTjA