30 years of murder: ‘Problems’ Northern Ireland – News2IN
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30 years of murder: ‘Problems’ Northern Ireland

30 years of murder: 'Problems' Northern Ireland
Written by news2in

Londonderry, United Kingdom: Northern Ireland was torn apart by three decades of violence between the nationalist and union people ended with Belfast’s approval signed 23 years ago.
The majority of the provincial protestants are preferred continuing the British government.
Catholic republicans want the same rights and reunification with the rest of Ireland.
The following is a picture of “The Troubles” where more than 3,500 people were killed.
Violence erupted in 1968 when the police used the power of the demonstration of peaceful Catholic civil rights in Londonderry demanded an end to discrimination in voting, employment and housing.
The degeneration of situations such as Catholic and demonstrations ended in clashes with police and Protestants.
In August 1969 as sectarian violence gripped the province, British forces were deployed.
In 1970 a Catholic group guerrilla, the White Irish Republican Army (Ira), began a bombing campaign and shooting against the army.
The union’s paramilitary group responded, mostly by killing Catholics, continued to drive a wedge between the community.
Exploding violence after January 1972 when 13 people were killed on “Bloody Sunday” after the British army of the open fire in March Catholic civil rights peace in Londonderry.
One of the protesters died later.
London delayed the North Ireland provincial government three months later, caused decades of government directly from the British capital.
In 1974 Ira extended the bombing campaign to England with attacks in the pub in Guildford, Woolwich and Birmingham who killed around 30 people throughout.
It is also an assassinates of the figure of the British key formation including a queen cousin Elizabeth II Lord Louis Mountbatten in the Irish rustic sea in 1979.
On the same day 18 British soldiers were killed in Ira’s ambush in WarrenPoint in Northern Ireland.
A turning point came in 1981 when Ira Inmate Bobby Sands and nine colleagues die on a hunger strike in Prison Maze demanded his status of political prisoners.
Their deaths attract global sympathy for the cause of the Republic.
The following year the political wings Ira Sinn Fein won his first seat in parliament.
A year after Gerry Adams was elected party chairman.
Ira continued to attack in the UK, with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher almost fled death in a bomb attack at the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the 1984 Conference of the Conservative Party where five people died.
Seven years later they tried to kill his successor, John Major, in a mortar attack at 10 Downing Street.
In 1992 and 1993 two massive bombings killed four people and caused major damage in the city of London Hub Finance.
Efforts by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath to build the Executive Founder Power distribution in 1973 after the United States strike.
Thatcher signed Anglo-Ireland’s agreement in 1985, admitted Dublin said in Northern Ireland affairs.
Behind the screen of the talks leading to the ceasefire of the Ira Weapon in 1994, which broke up as a kiosk negotiations.
In July 1997, after Tony Blair became the Prime Minister of Manpower, Sinn Fein received a place at the negotiating table after Ira said a new ceasefire.
The Friday Agreement Agung was signed on April 10, 1998 between London, Dublin and the main Northern Ireland political parties.
This leads to the new Semi-Autonomous Northern Ireland with the government division of power between Protestants and Catholics.
The deadly single cruel of the period came four months after the agreement when 29 people were killed in the city of Omagh in a bomb planted by the dissident group, Real Ira.
The attack has a strengthening effect, rather than damaging, a peace agreement.

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