Mr Trimble hopes to ensure that as many as possible of those selected will back his pro-agreement line.t Three schoolgirls were injured and a pregnant woman taken to hospital suffering from shock after a stoning attack on a bus in north Belfast yesterday.One of the girls needed stitches in a head wound and the other two suffered cuts on their legs when the bus was attacked on the Antrim Road as it passed Belfast Zoo.. John Hunter, a barrister, has made no secret of his anti-accord stand. He said the selections showed that democracy was alive and well within the party, adding that he had made his views absolutely clear to the selection meeting, with a large number of delegates obviously supporting them.Similar selection meetings are to take place all over Northern Ireland in the next two weeks. Mr Donaldson, the party's youngest MP and often mentioned as a possible future leader, said he was "disappointed'' but would accept the decision, taken at a meeting of party officers. The move was seen as a sign of growing confidence among Trimble loyalists after the strong yes vote in the referendum.The party leadership suffered a setback, however, when its South Antrim association picked an opponent of the agreement as one of its two assembly candidates.
I was very happy.''He and other DUP members signalled a toning-down of the party's line, moving it away from the apocalyptic pre-referendum warnings to a less unremittingly negative approach tailored for the assembly campaign."We're not wreckers, we're savers," he declared, saying they would work "constructively, peacefully, constitutionally and democratically" within the assembly.Mr Trimble's party last night decided not to permit one of its MPs, Geoffrey Donaldson, who had been against the agreement, to stand in the assembly elections. THE QUEEN was included in the Rev Ian Paisley's comprehensive list of targets at the opening news conference of the Belfast assembly elections campaign yesterday when he criticised her and described her as "very foolish" His remarks caused the first skirmish of the campaign. The Ulster Unionists, led by David Trimble, immediately accused him of negativity and of "losing it more and more as every day passes". The Alliance Party said he had "hit a new low''. Mr Paisley's comments may not go down well with his traditional supporters, who are generally fiercely defensive of the Royal Family.The Democratic Unionist party leader said that the Government was using the monarchy in support of the Good Friday agreement, which he opposes."The Queen has no political voice, her voice is the voice of her masters and, of course, she has become the parrot.
"This campaign reeked of the same stench as came from Germany in the rise of fascism.''Saying he had been satisfied with the referendum result, he added: "The press reported that I was very miserable-looking That's an absolute lie. She is very foolish to do what she's doing and I don't think the people of Northern Ireland will take kindly to it,'' he said.Buckingham Palace said the only comment the Queen had made was at the time of the agreement, when she said she shared delight about the accord.Mr Paisley's many targets yesterday included the media and polling organisations which he accused of "colossal" deception: "You people carried out a coercion of the minds and hearts of the Ulster people," he told reporters. He said he wanted the rest of the visit to reflect Japan's cultural and economic links with Britain.. Sisters Elizabeth Paddon and Diana Hallward, from Devizes, Wiltshire, whose father died shortly after being released from three years' Japanese captivity in the notorious Changi jail in Singapore, waved a banner reading "The Garter is a sham".Mrs Paddon said: "My father came home to die. It is all in the name of economics and trade."Senior members of the Cabinet, including Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, bowed their heads in greeting to the Emperor on the platform for a march past in his honour on Horseguards Parade.The Queen told the Emperor and Empress: "I hope that you will carry away many happy memories of your stay, and that they will last through all the seasons of the years ahead, come rain or shine - for Britain is no fair-weather friend."The protesters had ignored an appeal by Mr Blair to give the Emperor a warm welcome but the Prime Minister spent the day limiting the diplomatic damage in a series of interviews in which he emphasised the need for reconciliation.

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