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Casement Park will be built ‘on my watch’ – O’Neill

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Casement Park will be built ‘on my watch’ – O’Neill

Casement Park will be built “on my watch”, Northern Ireland’s First Minister Michelle O’Neill has said.

Ms O’Neill was addressing a major rally on Irish unification in Belfast.

More than 2,000 people attended the Ireland’s Future Pathway to Change event in the SSE Arena.

Ms O’Neill referred to the ongoing uncertainty over funding for the rebuilding of Casement Park GAA stadium in west Belfast.

The derelict ground has been earmarked as a venue for five Euro 2028 matches.

However, the funding needed to build the stadium in time for the tournament is still not in place and there are concerns the delays will see Belfast missing out on a tournament being jointly hosted by the UK and Ireland.

Ms O’Neill said: “Casement Park will be built on my watch.”

She also said she had a positive relationship with the DUP’s deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly.

She said: “We have common ground, the common ground is prosperity for everybody.

“Our common ground is around trying to build our community.”

She said Westminster had shown it would never serve the interests of people in Northern Ireland, which demonstrated the need for constitutional change.

Michelle O’Neill said she had a positive relationship with deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly

Eleven political parties from across the island are taking part in the event.

Former Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald will also speak.

Former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams also attended.

Opening the event, senator Frances Black, Ireland’s Future chairwoman, said: “It is undeniable that change is imminent.”

The Alliance Party’s Nuala McAllister took part in a panel discussion after party leader Naomi Long withdrew.

Ms McAllister said the priority for her party was to reform the Stormont powersharing institutions.

She said: “We do not want to create a divide here where we radicalise on either side.”

The stated aim of Ireland’s Future is to promote debate and discussion about what a united Ireland would look like. It is campaigning for a referendum on reunification.

The group says Brexit has created a fresh impetus for constitutional change, with more people looking at unification as a way to mitigate the consequences of the UK’s departure from the EU.

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