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  2. Transport in Belfast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Belfast

    Separate associations serving nationalist and unionist areas operate throughout Belfast. During the Troubles, nationalist taxi drivers in West Belfast and Ardoyne became targets for loyalist assassination campaigns. [14] Today black taxis take tourists on tours of the city's sectarian murals. They are now outnumbered by private hire minicabs.

  3. Hackney carriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hackney_carriage

    A hackney or hackney carriage (also called a cab, black cab, hack or taxi) is a carriage or car for hire. [1] A hackney of a more expensive or high class was called a remise . [ 2 ] A symbol of London and Britain, the black taxi is a common sight on the streets of London. [ 3 ]

  4. William Moore (loyalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Moore_(loyalist)

    William Moore (1949 – 17 May 2009) was a Northern Irish loyalist.He was a member of the Shankill Butchers, an Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) gang. It was Moore who provided the black taxi and butcher knives which the gang used to carry out its killings.

  5. Belfast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belfast

    A 1685 plan of Belfast by the military engineer Thomas Phillips, showing the town's ramparts and Lord Chichester's castle, which was destroyed in a fire in 1708. The name Belfast derives from the Irish Béal Feirste (Irish pronunciation: [bʲeːlˠ ˈfʲɛɾˠ(ə)ʃtʲə]), [4] "Mouth of the Farset" [6] a river whose name in the Irish, Feirste, refers to a sandbar or tidal ford. [7]

  6. Metro (Belfast) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metro_(Belfast)

    Bus services in and around Belfast often ran in competition with black cab taxis throughout the 1970s and 1980s. These offered lower fares and provided individual services for Belfast's Protestant and Catholic communities at times when bus services were forced off the road by disorder and paramilitary action. [2] [6]

  7. Timeline of Ulster Defence Association actions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Ulster_Defence...

    20 April: UDA members walked into a taxi depot on Clifton Street in Belfast and asked for a taxi to Ardoyne. From the location of the depot and the stated destination, they could be sure their driver was a Catholic. They forced the driver (Gerard Donnelly, aged 22) to stop at Harrybrook Street, where they killed him with a shot in the head. [8] [9]

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