Background
Ní Chuilín was born and raised in the New Lodge area of Belfast.
Ní Chuilín was born and raised in the New Lodge area of Belfast.
She graduated from the Open University in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Social Studies after completing a degree which she began whilst in prison.
She later received a master"s degree in Management from Queen"s University Belfast. Ní Chuilín was an active volunteer in the Ireland Republican Army. In 1989, she was arrested after trying to place a booby-trap bomb under the gates of Crumlin Royal Ulster Constabulary station. At Belfast Crown Court the following year, she was convicted of firearm possession, possession of explosives with the intent to endanger life, and attempted murder.
Ní Chuilín was sentenced to eight years in prison, but she was released after only four years.
She worked for ten years as coordinator of Tar Anall, a project for republican ex-prisoners. In 1999, Ní Chuilín was one of two founding directors of Coiste Na North-Iarchimi, a company described as "the umbrella organisation for republican ex-prisoner self-help groups throughout Ireland".
The company was struck off in 2011 after failing to provide accounts, and Ní Chuilín resigned her position. Ní Chuilín has been active with Sinn Féin since her release from prison and represented the Oldpark electoral area on Belfast City Council from 2005 to 2007, when she was replaced by Conor Maskey following her election to the Northern Ireland
Ní Chuilín was elected in 2007 to the Northern Ireland as a Sinn Féin member for North Belfast.
Re-elected in 2011, she was on 17 May 2011 elected by the under the Doctorate"Hondt method as Minister of Culture, Arts and Leisure.
In this capacity Ní Chuilín became the first senior Sinn Féin representative to attend an association football match involving the Northern Ireland team, when it defeated the Faroe Islands at Windsor Park on 10 August 2011, and she commended "the very real efforts that have been made by the IFA to tackle sectarianism at their matches". In September 2011 Ní Chulín"s Department launched Líofa 2015, a project aimed at encouraging people in Northern Ireland to learn, teach and speak Irish. In August 2012 Ní Chuilín revealed a £3m investment programme to improve facilities for boxing in Northern Ireland, saying "Over £3m will be invested through Sport Northen Ireland.
lieutenant"s an initial investment, but it is to make sure that boxing clubs have the facilities that are fit for purpose, because at the minute many of them don"t."
In 2011 former Ireland Republican Army prisoner Mary McArdle was appointed Special Adviser to Ní Chuilín.
This appointment prompted much public controversy, as McArdlle had been convicted involvement in the murder of Mary Travers and the attempted murder of her father Tom Travers. Ann Travers, sister of Mary, spoke to the press of her anger at the appointment, and repeatedly demanded that McArdle resign.
McArdle was later moved from the post, and in June 2013 the Northern Ireland passed a bill to bar anyone with a serious conviction from being a special political adviser.
Provisional Irish Republican Army. 3rd Northern Ireland. 4th Northern Ireland
She has been a member of the Northern Ireland for Belfast North since 2007 and currently serves in the Northern Ireland Executive as Minister of Culture, Arts and Leisure.