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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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