President of Ireland to make historic state visit
Irish President Michael D. Higgins is to become the first Irish head of state to make a state visit to Britain, in another symbolic step forward for relations between the neighboring countries.
The visit in April will come three years after Britain's Queen Elizabeth made a groundbreaking trip to the republic, which helped to heal deep-rooted unease and put Anglo-Irish relations on a new footing.
Higgins's return visit will be seen as an official sign of further progress following the hard-won peace in Northern Ireland, which remains part of the United Kingdom.
Britain also voluntarily contributed billions of pounds toward an international bailout of the Irish economy in 2010.
The president's Aras an Uachtarain official residence confirmed Higgins had accepted an invitation for a three-day state visit.
The 72-year-old poet is expected to stay at Windsor Castle, west of London, from April 8 to 10.
Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny said in a statement: "I warmly welcome the official confirmation that President Higgins will pay an official visit to the United Kingdom.
"This is a further demonstration of the warm and positive relationship that now exists between Ireland and the United Kingdom.
"The state visit in April, following on the very successful visit to Ireland by Queen Elizabeth in 2011, will be a wonderful opportunity to deepen this even further."
The sovereign's highly charged visit in May that year was the first by a British monarch since her grandfather king George V in 1911, before the republic won independence from Britain in 1922.
Last year the queen, 87, also shook the hand of former Irish Republican Army guerrilla chief Martin McGuinness to help draw a line under a conflict that cost the lives of thousands of soldiers and civilians, including that of her cousin.
The meeting with McGuinness, now the deputy first minister of Northern Ireland, came 14 years after the IRA ended its war against British rule in the province, and is one of the last big milestones in a peace process.
Despite the gradual warming of top-level ties, no Irish president has yet paid a state visit to the country across its only border.
Mary Robinson was the first Irish head of state to meet Queen Elizabeth, when she had tea with her in Buckingham Palace in 1996.
Higgins, a former arts minister, has met the 87-year-old monarch and her husband Prince Philip before, at Belfast's Lyric Theatre in June 2012.
AFP-Reuters
(China Daily 11/19/2013 page11)