News

Extracts from police body-worn video recording the arrests of Winston Irvine and Robin Workman are released to the BBC.
Loyalist “policing” and intra-community terror, if anything, has received even less attention, yet these activities were intrinsic to the conduct of the Troubles.
A convicted loyalist bomber and major suspect in the shocking Loughinisland massacre stepped out in the summer sunshine on ...
The self-image of loyalist volunteers in the UDA and the UVF (Ulster Volunteer Force) is that they were defending Northern Protestants. Similarly, the Provisional IRA prided itself as the line of ...
The Troubles were a long-running insurgency waged in Northern Ireland from the 1960s through the 1990s. ... a Loyalist paramilitary group, bombed a Catholic pub, ...
play Loyalist paramilitary violence. Groups such as the UDA and UVF killed more than 900 during Northern Ireland's Troubles. Paramilitary groups such as the UDA and the UVF killed more than 900 ...
The loyalist paramilitaries also agreed to decommission their weapons as the IRA was no longer a threat. Loyalist violence had always been largely reactive - with no IRA, there was no need for the ...
B elfast has become a familiar place on our screens over the past decade, serving as a noir-ish (and often uncredited) backdrop to hits such as Line of Duty and The Fall.Yet with a few notable ...
Lord Selborne and others of the anti-Irish die-hard persuasion, including Lord [Edward] Carson, want a British Committee of ...
From the late ’60s until 1998, when the Good Friday Agreement wound down hostilities between the Catholic nationalist Irish Republican Army and the U.K.-supported loyalist protestant militias ...
The Troubles, which began in 1969, the year in which “Belfast” is set, dominated the news cycle for nearly 30 years, including most of my childhood and much of my young adulthood.