Former Northern Ireland First Minister on being abused while posing for a selfie
ARLENE Foster has spoken of her sadness after being ambushed and abused at an awards ceremony by an IRA-supporter.
The former Northern Ireland First Minister had posed for a video-selfie with a young woman at the Local Women Business Awards in Belfast over the weekend.
But the woman shouted “up the RA” – a chant in support of the IRA – in footage that quickly went viral.
Speaking about what happened Arlene told Mark Steyn on GB News: “I went to that award ceremony on Saturday night, and it was a really lovely occasion. There were a lot of young people there wanting to get selfies, young people who were there to celebrate the success of their businesses. And it was a really great night.
“Then this young lady came up as it seemed nothing out of the ordinary around that as she asked me, could she get a selfie? I said, ‘yes, of course’. She then proceeded to stand beside me. And you’ve seen what happened.
“It’s a horrible thing, I think, for those of us who have suffered as a result of the IRA. Thankfully, my father survived the murder attempt on his life in 1979, something I remember very well, because I was there at the time, I was eight years of age in our home, when my father came in with blood coming from his head.”
“But as I say, he survived. And we’re always very thankful that he did. But then…when I was going to school, aged 16, I was aged 17, when I was blown up in a school bus simply because our bus driver was a part time member of the security forces.
“This lady comes up to me and shouts ‘ooh, ah, up the RA’ as if it’s some culturally cool thing to do. It’s not. And the worry for me, is that, first of all, it’s so disappointing that a young person should think that that’s acceptable in society.
“But secondly, it has become normalised because Republican leaders here in Northern Ireland said over the summer that there was no alternative to killing people during the troubles, that they had to do it.
“So then young people in Northern Ireland think it’s normal and think that he IRA are some good guys, whereas in actual fact, they went around in the dead of night, sticking car bombs under people’s cars, and coming to people’s homes to murder them.”
She added: “The reality is this young woman, and indeed others, guilty of singing ‘ooh, ah, up the RA’ should visit some of the victim’s families. I used to have a young girl who worked for me, who was only 11 months old when her father was gunned down on his farm.
“People need to understand that the IRA were a vicious criminal organisation that was seeking to eradicate support for the Union here in Northern Ireland.
“They have gone on a different path now and have decided to go into politics, but they still do not condemn what they did and that’s the fundamental issue.
“I have no difficulty condemning criminality and terrorism…but they still don’t condemn murdering their neighbours in Northern Ireland.”
In a direct offer to the young woman, Dame Arlene told GB News: “I would like to take this young lady to a cemetery anywhere in County Fermanagh, she would see the results of supporting the IRA, and she would see many headstones of young man who were murdered, trying to defend their country and working for the good of the whole community.
“So it is depressing. It is sad. And I think what really needs to happen is to have some grown up leadership from the Republican movement.”