Northern Ireland’s First Minister Peter Robinson has called for Catholics and Protestants to unite to end sectarian division.
He addressed hundreds of members at today’s Democratic Unionist Party annual conference near Belfast.
“The conflict of the last 40 years created terrible divisions. It became a case of ‘them and us’. And that attitude deepened divisions further,” he said. “If we want a better society it can’t be ‘them and us’. It can only be ‘all of us’.”
Mr Robinson entered the packed hall to a rock star style reception with the white and red of the Ulster flag being flown by many delegates.
Mr Robinson said the economic crisis would pass but argued that the lasting challenge was to tackle the causes of division. He added that there can be no greater guarantee of the long-term security of the union than the support of significant numbers of Catholics.
“An end to the Troubles did not bring an end to division and that dilemma will not solve itself,” he said.
“Our critics have claimed that we want a society which is carved up rather
than shared. Some of them accuse us of wanting a separate but equal society,”
he added.
“Let me be clear, nothing could be further from the truth. It is not right and
it would not work. I do not want a society where people live close together, but live separate lives.” He said the task was to persuade, rather than defeat.
Peace walls are still in place in Belfast to keep apart Catholics and Protestants, he said. Most working class areas are divided along religious lines. Many still vote along nationalist or unionist lines, and last summer saw pitched battles between republican youths and police in Belfast amid Orange Order marches.
Despite this, Mr Robinson said, power sharing has delivered progress on agreeing moves towards creating a shared society and inter-community dialogue.
The First Minister added: “I tell you, now is the moment. Miss it and we may
miss it forever. Miss it and we may drift and stray. We have the prospect of making a difference that previous generations never had or never took, a chance that future generations may never get or never grab.”
The DUP leader pledged his support for victims of the conflict and said he would not allow republicans to rewrite the past.
In April this year new Catholic Constable Ronan Kerr was blown up by dissident republicans in Omagh, Co Tyrone. At his funeral members of the Gaelic Athletic
Association and the Police Service of Northern Ireland stood side by side, a strongly symbolic moment in the region.
The First Minister added: “The murder of Constable Ronan Kerr showed that the threat from terrorism still exists, but more importantly the reaction to his death demonstrated that this threat will never, never win.”
He strongly opposed proposals to remove contentious symbols from the Prison
Service. “We will support sensible reform of the Prison Service but let me make it
clear, we will ensure that the Crown and the Royal title are preserved,” he said.