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Protests in Dublin as queen arrives in Ireland on first state visit
Date: 5/17/2011 7:55:47 AM Sender: CNN
Protests in Dublin as queen arrives in Ireland on first state visit

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Dublin, Ireland (CNN) -- Queen Elizabeth II arrived in Ireland on Tuesday, the first UK monarch to visit the country since it gained independence in 1921.
The queen, wearing a symbolic green outfit and hat, was met at the Casement aerodrome just outside Dublin by the British and Irish ambassadors for the start of a historic four-day visit.
The queen, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, was then escorted to Aras an Uachtarain, President Mary McAleese's official residence, where the British national anthem God Save the Queen and Amhrann na bhFainn, the Irish national anthem, were played in the grounds.
A 21-gun salute and an Air Corps flypast also greeted the queen.
President McAleese has developed a good relationship with the queen and has visited Buckingham Palace, the queen's official residence in London, on a number of occasions, say royal experts.
Dublin, Ireland (CNN) -- Queen Elizabeth II arrived in Ireland on Tuesday, the first UK monarch to visit the country since it gained independence in 1921.
The queen, wearing a symbolic green outfit and hat, was met at the Casement aerodrome just outside Dublin by the British and Irish ambassadors for the start of a historic four-day visit.
The queen, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, was then escorted to Aras an Uachtarain, President Mary McAleese's official residence, where the British national anthem God Save the Queen and Amhrann na bhFainn, the Irish national anthem, were played in the grounds.
A 21-gun salute and an Air Corps flypast also greeted the queen.
President McAleese has developed a good relationship with the queen and has visited Buckingham Palace, the queen's official residence in London, on a number of occasions, say royal experts.
Ireland's fight to free itself from its former imperial master is likely to form much of the narrative of the visit, the first by a UK monarch to the republic since it gained independence in 1921.
There will be constant reminders of the violent past. Her plane touched down for example at Casement Aerodrome, a military airfield named after Roger Casement, who was executed for treason in 1916 for conspiring with the Germans. His fate was sealed when the queen's grandfather George V refused to commute his death sentence.
The Irish war of Independence that the killing was a part of directly led to partition of Ireland in 1921. The majority of the island gained independence but six of the nine counties of the province of Ulster chose to stay in the United Kingdom, eventually becoming the country of Northern Ireland.
In the late 1960s the conflict between mainly Protestant unionists who want Northern Ireland to remain part of the UK and largely Roman Catholic nationalists who want the North to be reunited with the rest of Ireland exploded into a political and sectarian war, known as the Troubles.
The three decades of ensuing violence between the IRA and loyalists claimed the lives of more than 3,000 people, most of them north of the border, and while the Good Friday Agreement effectively ended the conflict, suspicions remain, and for this reason the queen's state visit is more than symbolic.
Under the terms of the landmark accord, terrorist groups on both sides dumped their weapons, and political allies of both sides now work together in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government.
The change has been so rapid that even as recently as the late 1990s one journalist said he could never have imagined a state visit by the queen. Toby Harnden, who covered Ireland for the Daily Telegraph, said while some people on both sides still have their doubts over it -- for different reasons -- more significant is the peaceable language used in the debate.
"Some Catholics will see this as Britain cementing its claim over the Irish territory of the six counties of Northern Ireland," Harnden told CNN.
Meanwhile "the Protestants will see the queen's visit as ratification of a state that they believe is constitutionally hostile to any British presence in Ireland. So on both sides there'll be qualms."
But the comment by Gerry Adams -- a pivotal figure in Northern Irish history as long-time leader of Sinn Fein, the IRA's political allies -- who said the queen's visit was "premature" speaks volumes, Harnden said, compared to incendiary language he had used in the past.
For instance, "when the queen's cousin Lord Mountbatten was killed by the IRA in 1979 (Adams) said it was an execution that was fully justified."
"When I was there the IRA cease-fire had collapsed, there was violence and killings, no surrender, no compromise. In those days there was no likelihood of the queen ever visiting."


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