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Trisha Ziff’s film is an intimate portrait of the former Sinn Féin president but those expecting fresh revelations will be ...
Say Nothing, both book and show, depicts the resumed violence among the IRA, British forces, and loyalist paramilitary groups, which lasted from around 1968 to the signing of the Good Friday ...
Say Nothing, available to stream on Hulu, picks up in the 1960s in West Belfast as the violence between Protestant loyalists and the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), the most active ...
Michelle O'Neill says there was "no alternative" to IRA violence during the Troubles, but says that now, the Good Friday Agreement provides an alternative to conflict. Politicians in Northern ...
Fiercely anti-British, he refused to condemn IRA violence, and also refused to condemn attacks on Catholics by Northern Ireland’s Protestant paramilitaries, reasoning – despite his Catholic ...
Could Sean 'Diddy' Combs see a release from prison with a new bail package before his sentencing hearing? A bail bondsman weighed in.
Saoradh denies the links with the New IRA’s violence but a member of its group was charged with the attempted murder of two police officers in a bomb attack in Strabane last November.
Michelle O'Neill told the BBC there had been no alternative to IRA violence during the Troubles.
He said his party, which played a key role in striking the Good Friday Agreement, proved there was an alternative to IRA violence during the Troubles.
Although the latter continued to be involved in violence for several years it gradually drifted into the background and the 'Provisionals' came to be routinely referred to as "the IRA".
The leader of the centre-ground Alliance Party has said Michelle O’Neill’s comments that there was no alternative to IRA violence during the Northern Ireland’s troubled past were wrong.
Say Nothing’s Gerry Adams disclaimer, explained The former Sinn Fein president’s IRA denial is an inadvertent gift to the show.