The Secret Policemen
Secrecy for Catholic police officers in Northern Ireland can be the difference between life and death. Barbara Collins reports.
Secrecy for Catholic police officers in Northern Ireland can be the difference between life and death.
For decades most Catholics were suspicious of the police - because the force was overwhelmingly Protestant and seen as enforcing British rule.
Political agreement in Northern Ireland revolutionised policing.
The police force became a police service, made more representative by the adoption of neutral symbols and by a recruitment programme designed to increase the numbers of Catholic officers.
Constable Ronan Kerr was one of that new generation of recruits.
A Catholic officer from a nationalist family, he was killed by a bomb which exploded under his car on the 2 of April 2011.
He was 25 years of age and had been a serving officer for a matter of months.
His killers are dissidents who oppose the political settlement and who view any Catholic and nationalist who joins up as a traitor.
Catholic members of the PSNI must be extremely careful about who they tell about their job - sometimes even having to lie to family and friends.
Barbara Collins investigates the toll taken by this life of secrecy.
(Image: A heavily armed PSNI (Police Service of Northern Ireland) police officer on patrol. Credit: Press Association)
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