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Belfast City Airport has reopened to flights on Monday, a day after its runway closed when a plane was damaged in a "hard landing", but some delays are expected.. The Aer Lingus aircraft had to be ...
The Belfast Telegraph was entirely broadsheet until 19 February 2005, when the Saturday morning edition was introduced and all Saturday editions were converted to compact. [11] The weekday morning compact edition was launched on 22 March 2005. [12] In 2015, the Telegraph launched the magazine supplement Family Life. [13]
Stormont's infrastructure minister John O'Dowd has said that anyone driving into Belfast city centre should "expect congestion". He was speaking after motorists complained of several weeks of ...
The main edition of UTV Live airs from 18:00 to 18:30 every weeknight, covering the day's news, current affairs and sport from across Northern Ireland.. The 18:00 programme (known on air as UTV Live at Six) is broadcast from UTV's headquarters in City Quays 2, Belfast.
The Irish News is the only independently owned daily newspaper based in Northern Ireland, and has been so since its launch on 15 August 1891 as an anti-Parnell newspaper by Patrick MacAlister. [4] It merged with the Belfast Morning News in August 1892, and the full title of the paper has since been The Irish News and Belfast Morning News.
Leaders from several Western countries have welcomed news today that Bashar al-Assad's nearly 25-year rule has ended. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the UK welcomed the fall of Assad's ...
Born in Worcestershire, England, Murray was educated at St. Malachy's College, Belfast, and Trinity College Dublin. He began his career in journalism as a trainee with The Belfast Telegraph newspaper from 1975 to 1977, before working for the Irish national broadcast television and radio service RTÉ between 1977 and 1982.
A series of riots in loyalist areas of Northern Ireland began in Waterside, Derry, [b] on 30 March 2021. After four nights of rioting in Derry, [4] [5] disturbances spread to south Belfast on 2 April, where a loyalist protest developed into a riot involving iron bars, bricks, masonry and petrol bombs.