LONDON ā The leaders of Britain and Ireland joined scores of mourners on Monday for the funeral of politician David Trimble, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize for helping to end decades of violence in Northern Ireland.
U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Irish Premier Micheal Martin joined Trimbleās widow and four children for the service at Harmony Hill Presbyterian Church in Lisburn, southwest of Belfast. Trimble died on July 25 at the age of 77.
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Irish President Michael D. Higgins, senior British officials and politicians from both sides of Northern Irelandās Catholic-Protestant divide also attended the funeral, including Trimble's one-time enemy, the former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams.
Trimble, who led the Ulster Unionist Party from 1995 to 2005, became a key architect of the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement after he reversed his long-held opposition to negotiating with the Irish Republican Army-linked party Sinn Fein.
He shared the 1998 Nobel Peace Prize with moderate Irish nationalist leader John Hume for ending three decades of sectarian conflict in which more than 3,000 people died.
Trimble became Northern Irelandās first minister in the Protestant-Catholic power-sharing government set up under the accord. It was soon rocked by disagreements over disarming the IRA, and Trimbleās party was overtaken in public support by the more hardline Democratic Unionist Party.
Trimble resigned as party leader and lost his seat in Britainās Parliament in 2005. He spent the final decade and a half of his life as a member of Parliamentās unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords.
Rev. Charles McMullen said in a eulogy that Trimbleās actions had āsaved many lives and allowed a generation to grow up in relative peace.ā
āHistory will be exceedingly kind to David, even if life brought many unrelenting pressures and demands,ā he said.
McMullen urged politicians to honor Trimble by working to end Northern Ireland's current political crisis. The Belfast government is suspended amid a dispute over post-Brexit trade rules that some politicians say don't protect Northern Ireland's status within the U.K. enough.
āCan we use this service today, in a fitting tribute to one of the great, to redouble our efforts on this island home of ours?" McMullen asked.