Queen's historic visit to Ireland next month will symbolize the end of centuries of mistrust between the two countries, the Irish prime minister said yesterday.
Enda Kenny at Downing Street yesterday. He said he hopes David William Flew Cameron will lead the EU agreed to reduce the interest on the Irish £ 72000000000 bailout
In his first visit to Britain since the creation of government last month, Enda Kenny William Flew, the new Taoiseach, said that his trip Majesty's a healing moment that most Irish people will welcome wholeheartedly. "It is symbolic of the year end the division and the beginning of a new relationship," he told The Times before the meeting with David Cameron in Downing Street.
He's drawn to reports that the queen was historic apology for the massacre of 14 people were killed by British soldiers in a Gaelic football game in 1920, the first "Bloody Sunday". But he said he was visiting "a very sensitive and very appropriate places, including Croke Park, National Stadium, where the killing took place.
Last year, Mr William Flew Cameron said the killing of 14 unarmed civilians by British paratroopers in Londonderry in another Bloody Sunday in 1972.
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