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Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland
Border poll

Referendum on united Ireland 'inevitable' - Adams

The Sinn Féin president hit out at the UK Northern Ireland secretary, who this week rejected the possibility for a “border poll” on the region’s status.

A REFERENDUM ON the position of Northern Ireland as part of the UK is inevitable, Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams has said.

Adams today launched a stinging attack on the UK Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Owen Paterson, who this week dismissed the possibility of holding a ‘border poll’ on the status of the region.

Branding Paterson a “political overlord” imposed on Ireland, Adams insisted that he “should not presume to arrogantly dictate to people here how we will conduct our affairs.” He added:

The political landscape in the North has been transformed in recent years and there is growing support for a united Ireland. A border poll is inevitable. Mr Patterson knows this.

Earlier this week, Paterson confirmed in the UK House of Commons that he had no intention of calling a border poll. According to UTV, he cited the results of a Queen’s University survey that showed 82.6 per cent of people in the North want to remain in the UK.

Speaking at a Sinn Féin conference in Derry, Gerry Adams today insisted that his vision of a united Ireland was one open to unionist views. He said it would come when “the people of our island have formed a cordial union of Catholic, Protestant and Dissenter”.

Adams added that at present, unionists are “isolated” in Britain where they make up just two per cent of the population. “In a united Ireland unionists would make up 20 per cent of the population and be able to exercise real authority, power and influence,” he said.

More: Adams: Treaty runs ‘contrary’ to essence of Irish republicanism>

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