Ireland

Northern barristers' oath to serve Queen changed

Lawyers in the North who are appointed Queens Counsel will no longer have to take an oath promising to serve Queen Elisabeth II. The British Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine has ordered that new Queens Counsel 's will simply have to promise to "well and truly serve all whom I may lawfully be called upon to serve in the office of one of Her Majesty's Counsel".

Earlier this year two Catholic barristers from Belfast lost a High Court case in which they alleged that the declaration to the Queen discriminated against Irish nationalists seeking to become Queens Counsel. In 1997 a committee of the Northern Ireland Bar Council recommended that the reference to serving the Queen be abolished.

In a statement announcing the removal of the oath, the Northern Ireland Court Service said Lord Irvine had been given the impression, during the High Court challenge, that the judiciary in the North had been consulted and were against changing the oath, when in fact there had been no such consultation.

Advertisement
Related Stories
RTÉ News 24 hours a day

LIVE TV

Now:
Now:
Monarch of the Glen
11:25 Saturday 21 November
Now:
Home and Away
12:05 Saturday 21 November
Next:
Home and Away
12:35 Saturday 21 November

Television Programmes

Radio Programmes

RTÉ.ie News Highlights

Fantasy Worlds

Ireland's first ever sci-fi and fantasy fiction festival takes place this weekend in Wexford

Play

Sportsmanship

Where has sportsmanship gone? Prime Time looks at theatrics and cheating in sport

Play

Letters from Santas

US shopping centre Santas are hoping to get the swine flu vaccine as a matter of urgency

Play

Let the Great World Spin

Dublin born author Colum McCann has won the fiction prize at the National Book Awards in the US

Play