
Entertainment
Share
Published 20:51 2 Jun 2018 BST
Updated 20:52 2 Jun 2018 BST
Explore more on these topics:
Thousands of people showed up to march in Belfast and Derry on Saturday to call for the legalisation of same-sex marriage in Northern Ireland.
The biggest march – which was organised by the Love Equality NI campaign – took place across central Belfast, led by the City’s Lord Mayor, Councillor Nuala McAllister. It ended with a mass gathering in front of City Hall, hosted by Belfast actor Bronagh Waugh. Another rally took place at Guildhall Square, Derry. Last month, a bill to bring same-sex marriage to NI was blocked from moving to the next stage at Westminster. Labour MP Conor McGinn, the politician who brought the bill to the House of Commons, said he had expected the government to object to the bill. Northern Ireland is currently the only part of the UK and Ireland where same-sex marriage is still illegal. https://twitter.com/Love_EqualityNI/status/1002915293696614400 https://twitter.com/ScotCuthbertson/status/1002858752746381312 https://twitter.com/Love_EqualityNI/status/1002913393601384448 Political deadlock over the issue has dogged Stormont for years, with the DUP resisting Sinn Féin calls for a law change. The last time same-sex marriage was brought up in parliament, a majority of MLPs voted in its favour, only to be blocked by the DUP citing a petition of concern. A petition of concern is a mechanism used at the Northern Ireland Assembly designed to protect one community from legislation may work in favour of one community over another. Should it be cited, any motion or amendment currently being discussed then needs cross-community support to continue. Essentially, a petition of concern henceforth vetos assembly decisions until a petition disallows it. A valid petition requires the signatures of 30 MLAs. JOE spoke to Sinn Féin politician and Former Belfast Lord Mayor Niall Ó Donnghaile who was at the rally on Saturday. “Today was another inclusive and colourful expression of people’s desire to see the same rights afforded to people across the rest of Ireland delivered here," Ó Donnghaile began. "As was said from the stage today, equality and rights threaten no one, whether that’s marriage equality, language rights, reproductive rights or access to legacy inquests - the North’s progress is being held to ransom by people who refuse to see their fellow citizens as equal. "Today shows though that as much as people are frustrated and continue to demand change they haven’t lost heart - much like the rest of Ireland we will see the change come about because people insist upon it.”
Universal’s £6bn UK Theme Park officially named
Entertainment
‘Apocalyptic’ fire rages over night in UK town as residents told to stay indoors
Locals awoke to plumes of smoke in the sky An “apocalyptic” fire has raged over night in a UK town with authorities telling resident to stay indoors. The incident caused a large response from emergency services with police at the scene this morning. Fire crews and police officers were called to the scene after alarms […]
Entertainment
1h
All the animals shortlisted to feature on new banknotes
Some are excluded The public can have their say on which creatures feature on future banknotes, as eighteen animals, birds and insects have been shortlisted to appear. On the next series of Bank of England notes, the wildlife beauty contest gives the colourful kingfisher and common frog an equal chance of a place. Earlier this […]
Entertainment
17h
Bobby Davro issues warning about overlooked symptom following cancer diagnosis
Entertainment