Culture

 

British Queen celebrates

A single economy for the island of Ireland would be good for prosperity, jobs and investment, Sinn Fein has claimed.

Party president Gerry Adams called on the Irish and British governments to set a date for a border poll and let the people of Northern Ireland vote on a united Ireland.

Delivering a keynote address almost 15 years since the Good Friday Agreement, he said a referendum in the next term of the Assembly and Oireachtas would be a key element in moving forward.

"Irish unity makes sense," the Louth TD said in Dublin.

"It makes political sense. It makes economic sense. It is in the best interests of the people of these islands."

Despite loyalists staging a protest in Belfast over the Union flag controversy for a seventh week and the economic crisis in the Republic of Ireland, Mr Adams maintained that it is time to legislate for the island to be united.

"Republicans believe that partition has been bad for the people of this island and for our economy. It has been bad for investment, bad for growth, bad for jobs," Mr Adams said.

"A planned single-island economy would be good for prosperity, good for jobs, good for investment. It would benefit everyone. Together is stronger."

Greater co-operation and harmonisation and unity would transform the economic and political landscape, Mr Adams said.

"Imagine the financial and efficiency benefits if there was one education system, one health service, one energy network and all-island investment practices."

United Ireland 'makes more sense'

A single economy for the island of Ireland would be good for prosperity, jobs and investment, Sinn Fein has claimed.

Party president Gerry Adams called on the Irish and British governments to set a date for a border poll and let the people of Northern Ireland vote on a united Ireland.

Delivering a keynote address almost 15 years since the Good Friday Agreement, he said a referendum in the next term of the Assembly and Oireachtas would be a key element in moving forward.

"Irish unity makes sense," the Louth TD said in Dublin.

 

"It makes political sense. It makes economic sense. It is in the best interests of the people of these islands."

Despite loyalists staging a protest in Belfast over the Union flag controversy for a seventh week and the economic crisis in the Republic of Ireland, Mr Adams maintained that it is time to legislate for the island to be united.

"Republicans believe that partition has been bad for the people of this island and for our economy. It has been bad for investment, bad for growth, bad for jobs," Mr Adams said.

"A planned single-island economy would be good for prosperity, good for jobs, good for investment. It would benefit everyone. Together is stronger."

Greater co-operation and harmonisation and unity would transform the economic and political landscape, Mr Adams said.

"Imagine the financial and efficiency benefits if there was one education system, one health service, one energy network and all-island investment practices."

The Press Association, photo by Sofia S