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The Belfast Media Group's Andersonstown News is a weekly published (Wednesdays) Belfast, Northern Ireland newspaper, which focuses on news and issues in west Belfast. The paper was founded in 1972. The paper was founded in 1972.
Joseph "Joe" Fenton (c. 1953 – 26 February 1989) was an estate agent from Belfast, Northern Ireland, killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) for acting as an informer for RUC Special Branch.
RIP.ie is a death notices website in Ireland, launched in 2005. [1] Funeral directors were able to post death notices on the website without additional costs to the family, [2] but funeral directors will be charged from 2025. As of 2021, the website received approximately 250,000 visits per day and more than 50 million pages were viewed each month.
Police are investigating the death of a woman at a nightclub in Belfast City Centre in the early hours of Sunday morning. Police, paramedics and fire crews were called to the venue at around 02:20 ...
Andersonstown, known colloquially as Andytown, is a suburb of west Belfast, Northern Ireland, at the foot of the Black Mountain and Divis Mountain. It contains a mixture of public and private housing and is largely a working-class area with a strong Irish nationalist and Irish Catholic tradition. The area stretches between the Shaws Road, the ...
Downtown Radio (Belfast) - The Bobby Hanvey "Ramblin' Man" Show (10 and 17 September 2004; 16 August 2009) "The Night the Troubles Started" BBC Radio Ulster (9 August 2009) The Derry Journal (9 May 2008) The Sunday World (20 October 1991, 23 March 2008 and 11 May 2008) The Belfast Newsletter (17 May 1993) The Andersonstown News; The Belfast ...
Rather than Mary McArdle and Sinn Féin saying her death was a mistake, what they should be saying is Mary Travers' murder is an embarrassment which has come back to haunt them." [14] Her brother, Paul Travers, who now lives in Australia, told the Belfast Telegraph in July 2011: "In 2011 we are told to put the past behind us and move on," he said.
Dolours Price was born on 16 December 1950 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. [1] [2] She and her sister, Marian, also an IRA member, were the daughters of Albert Price, a prominent Irish republican and former IRA member from Belfast [3] and Christina (née Dolan), a member of Cumann na mBan. Both parents were imprisoned at different times.