Arlene Foster has labelled some media coverage received by Sinn Féin's meeting of the newly crowned King Charles III as "intense" after he visited Northern Ireland earlier this week.
The former DUP leader said it was "not really big news" as Sinn Féin representatives have met the late Queen Elizabeth II and the new King when he was a Prince on "many occasions".
Writing in the Express, she said: "The coverage got so intense about Sinn Féin on some mainstream broadcasts that you would be forgiven for thinking the visit was about them and not marking the death of our sovereign and the first visit of her successor!"
Sinn Féin vice-president Michelle O'Neill and other Stormont party leaders met with Charles on Tuesday at Hillsborough Castle, Co Down, to express their sympathies on the death of his mother.
The Stormont Assembly Speaker, Sinn Féin's Alex Maskey, delivered a message of condolence on behalf of the people of Northern Ireland.
They also attended a memorial service at St Anne's Cathedral in Belfast reflecting on the life of the late Queen.
Dame Arlene wrote that "far too much in my view" had been said about the meeting between Sinn Féin members and the new King.
The former First Minister, who also joined the church service, remarked on Irish president Michael D Higgins being among those who attended from the Republic.
She said: "The President of Ireland, as he is styled, who could not bring himself to attend an ecumenical service to mark the centenary of Northern Ireland last year was present on this occasion to remember our gracious Queen. Progress of sorts."
President Higgins was at the centre of a diplomatic row last year after he declined an invitation to the Northern Ireland centenary service, saying he believed the event was not politically neutral.
Dame Arlene said the Queen's historic visit to the Republic in 2011 "showed tremendous leadership in reaching out to those who would not be royalists by nature".
"She did all that despite the pain that she had endured personally when the IRA murdered Lord Louis Mountbatten in Co Sligo in 1979."
The former DUP leader said the Queen "chose the Christian path of love and forgiveness" and "influenced so many to show tolerance and respect for difference".
Dame Arlene said that in his visit to Northern Ireland, King Charles "got his message across about continuing the work of his mother".
She added: "The King, as Prince of Wales, has been working quietly on reconciliation projects for years in Northern Ireland and it is important to acknowledge that, because some may not realise the good work that has been going on under his leadership."
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