Northern Ireland
The Troubles Have Included Numerous Bombings, Assassinations, and Killlings
Background: A Concise History of Major Events From 1850 to 1999
The "Bloody Sunday" Inquiry: On Jan. 30, 1972, British Soldiers Killed 13 Unarmed Catholics During a Civil Rights March
IRA Bombings in England
IRA Bombings in Northern Ireland
Days Before 30th Anniversary of Bloody Friday, IRA Apologizes for Civilian Victims During its 30 Year Campaign
Major Miscarriages of Justice As Prosecutors and Police Seek IRA Convictions
The Infamous Long Kesh Prison (1971 to 2000) and the Struggle of Irish Prisoners in H-Blocks
SAS Hunts and Kills IRA
From the Dissident "Real IRA": The Omagh Bomb in 1998: the Worst Terrorist Atrocity in Northern Ireland
Amnesty International Reports on Northern Ireland (1996 and 1999)
The Stevens Inquiry: Collusion Between Security Forces and Loyalist Paramilitaries Led to Murders
Stakeknife & IRA
Patrick Finucane, a Lawyer Who Represented IRA Members, Was Murdered in 1989
Rosemary Nelson, a Lawyer Who Represented IRA Members, Was Killed By a Car Bomb in 1999
The Ongoing Peace Process in Northern Ireland
Part of the Peace Process: Disbanding Northern Ireland's Militias
Part of the Peace Process: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Disarmament
Part of the Peace Process: Police Reform in Northern Ireland