NORTHERN IRELAND trade unionists have expressed the hope that
tomorrow’s massive Orange Order parade marking the centenary of the
signing of the anti-Irish Home Rule Ulster Covenant and a related
nationalist protest will pass off peacefully.
As unionists today
commemorate the date when 100 years ago close to half a million men and
women signed the Ulster Covenant, the Irish Congress of Trade Unions
appealed for tomorrow’s parade and protest to conclude without trouble
or rancour.
There is guarded optimism that the parade involving
more than 20,000 Orangemen and women marching behind up to 200 bands
from Belfast to Stormont tomorrow will be concluded without major
incident.
A commitment by the Orange Order to observe a Parades
Commission determination that only sacred music should be played when a
feeder parade passes by St Patrick’s Catholic Church in Belfast city
centre, and a pledge that a parallel nationalist protest will be
peaceful, have raised cautious hopes of a relatively calm day tomorrow.
Peter
Bunting, head of the Northern Ireland committee of ICTU, added his
voice to the various appeals for a violence-free parade.
“Rioting and
other forms of public disorder damage our fragile community
infrastructure and our embryonic tourist industry, contributing to
decreased economic opportunities,” he said.
While the parade takes
place tomorrow to facilitate a large attendance, the Ulster Covenant
was actually signed 100 years ago today, September 28th, known as Ulster
Day.
Led by the so-called Uncrowned King of Ulster, Sir Edward
Carson, a total of 237,368 men, some in their own blood, signed the
covenant pledging “by all means to defeat Home Rule”, while 234,046
women signed a similar declaration.
Tonight the DUP and the Ulster
Unionist Party will jointly host a dinner in the conference room of the
Titanic Belfast building to celebrate Ulster Day. The respective
leaders, Peter Robinson and Mike Nesbitt, are due to speak at the
dinner.
The Orange Order is also instituting a new loyal Orange
lodge today formed by existing members of the institution who are
graduates, students or employees of the University of Ulster.
People
can check whether any of their forebears signed the Ulster Covenant by
going to the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland website www.proni.gov.uk and by following the “Search the Ulster Covenant” link.