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Messages - Íseal agus crua isteach a

#257
Antrim / Re: ANTRIM HURLING
November 04, 2011, 04:48:31 AM
Some hurling and scenery pictures from the home of hurling http://youtu.be/9_sFhrdnyeE
#258
I hate the American,British,French,Israeli, Nato and every other ruling class bastard that wipes out these innocent people. Clinker those type of videos are real life and you will never see them on western news. Is their anything worse than to see children suffer in tolerably? Hell won't be full till these murdering bastards are in it.

http://youtu.be/aJURNC0e6Ek
#259
General discussion / Re: British State Collusion
October 13, 2011, 02:54:50 AM
 Helen McClafferty
The Omagh Atrocity's Part in Far Larger Crimes by Chris Fogarty - Irish American News   TWO NEWS ITEMS Reveal the continuing plight of the British-Occupied Irish:  1) Ex-IRA-man Gerry McGeough was sentenced to 20 years to serve two consecutive years fo...r combat against a British soldier 30 years ago in which both suffered gunshot wounds. The Brit wasn't charged.   2) The British gov't VERBALLY APOLOGIZED for murdering, 35 years ago, 12-year-old Majella O'Hare walking home from Confession. The British soldier who shot her (in the back) was always known, but he hasn't been prosecuted and won't be. As in nearly all cases of British murders and especially massacres of Irish non-combatants, only apologies ensue, and only after decades of "spin" and slandering of the victims. The uniformed murderers prove immune and are awarded medals and CBEs if their murder toll is adequate. Meanwhile, IRA-men are still tortured in Maghaberry.      THE JUDICIAL TRAVESTIES inflicted upon McGeough/O'Hare illustrates the GFA's evil consequences of selling-out the Six-Counties to Britain. McGeough's honorable defense of his country is criminalized while the daylight murder of a 12-year-old girl is immunized for thirty-five years and then "resolved" with a verbal "apology." Did Soviet or Nazi courts ever produce worse than the O'Hare/McGeough travesties? The Crown gov't just cannot help being its criminal self. All humans, except the utterly cowed, will risk all to be rid of it.   THE SELL-OUT of the Six Counties was a criminal operation long before the British gov't (through MI5 and Fr. Alex Reid of Belfast's Clonard monastery) subverted Gerry Adams. The decades of British gov't murders of Catholic men, women and children, mostly through army- and spook-led Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) psychopaths, have proven victorious. (Honorable Britonslike Capt. Fred Holroyd and Chief Constable John Stalker paid horrible prices for refusing to participate in mass murders.) The terrorism was greater than many could tolerate: an honorable Derry woman of my acquaintance now accepts British rule, having finally been cowed by the murder threats of British soldiers who tore her house apart on a regular basis for years with complete impunity   DAVID ERVINE, the UVF leader with the policy of randomly murdering Catholics to terrorize survivors into accepting British rule suggested, on record, that his policy was decisive. But during his triumphant visit to Washington in 1994 he learned it wasn't quite that decisive.He recorded his chagrin when the head of Washington's Britain desk informed him that had won "Ulster" (the uninformed refer to the Six Counties as "Ulster") for Britain only to FREE UP THE BRITISH ARMY FOR THE WARS BEING PLANNED AGAINST ISLAM. Thus, the Adams/McGuinness/Reid sell-out that led to the O'Hare/McGeough travesties, was part of EVEN GREATER EVILS PLANNED BY MONSTERS IN THE U.S./U.K. GOV'TS.
THE OMAGH ATROCITY'S part in Neo-Con plans is now clear. Though a key murderer of Catholics had been brought triumphantly to Washington in 1994, the sell-out still needed a major push,thus, "Omagh; The Bomb to End All Bombs" was planned (and later "spun"). That is why MI5,having subverted Chicago FBI agent Patrick "Ed" Buckley years earlier, brought him to Ireland. And Islam is why Buckley's US bosses and his bosses' bosses OK'd his MI5/Omagh mission. It proved easier for MI5/FBI to perpetrate Omagh than to blame it on the IRA. Consider their follow-up crimes: "Disappear" Paddy Dixon who had supplied the bomb car for MI5; "disappear" the satellite-tracked record of that car; "disappear" the phoned-in bomb warnings tapes and the log book into which they were transcribed; get the news media to cover up the absence of RUC injuries and divert attention from the disappeared evidence while demonizing the IRA enough to win the impending GFA referendum. One conjectures: Did the Crown award George Crosses to all Omagh RUC officers FOR "disappearing" the warning tapes and log book or DESPITE that criminal concealment. The stench of that award forced the Crown to later give George Crosses to all RUC.   FBI AGENT BUCKLEY was deployed to Ireland by MI5 after perpetrating crimes for them in Chicago. Those crimes were repeated in Omagh. The day that the Langert family were murdered, the local police named David Biro as their sole suspect (his murder weapon was later identified as FBI agent Lewis' 357 Magnum). The following day Buckley arrived, usurped control of the investigation, and prohibited the police from pursuing the actual murderer and sent them on nationwide wild goose chases. He got supine "reporter" Carol Marin to announce on network TV "IRA involvement," thus demonizing it. His subordinates soon framed me so cunningly for that atrocity that I was doomed, but Biro blabbed through his FBI cover into Life Without Parole. He remains in Pontiac prison. Prior to news of that atrocity I'd never even heard of anyone involved. Only after Buckley framed and incarcerated Mary (my wife), Frank O'Neill, Tony McCormick, and me on new false charges did someone (the Winnetka police?) contact our lawyers. At the Winnetka police HQ they photocopied signed murder investigation reports that had framed me. Were we poor we'd have gone straight from jail to trial to prison, but we barely bonded out, and by hiring expensive, connected attorneys we managed to get Discovery Documents including the evidentiary audiotape that we proved  in federal court was a criminal fabrication.  We four walked free, but so did the MI5/FBI criminals, to their next mission, in Ireland. That mission was Omagh, and once accomplished the FBI departed Ireland. Within hours of that blast MI5 eMailed MI5/FBI agent and life-long criminal (according to a NY State police affidavit) David Rupert. It summoned him to MI5's HQ immediately via Belfast airport where plane tickets awaited him and his wife; it ordered him to speak to nobody, especially to gardai.  Rupert/MI5 eMail correspondence is crucial' THE PATTERN EMERGES. The immunized crimes were all prelude to larger US/UK crimes. The immunized atrocities in Ireland were all either acts of mass terrorism that led to the GFA sell-out to Britain or were Obstructions of Justice regarding those crimes. Immunized atrocities include Dublin/Monaghan bombing (33 dead, 300 maimed), Bloody Sunday (14 dead, 16 wounded), McGurk's Pub bombing (15 dead, 17 maimed), Omagh (29 dead,, etc. The most effective terrorism was the decades-long UVF murders of Catholics (1000?). All perpetrators are identified.    THE PATTERN that exposes the GFA's US/UK criminal basis is the impunity: U.S. impunity to Buckley for his covering for murderer Biro while disinforming America of "IRA involvement;" his false imprisonments, perjuries, and fabrications of evidence, his involvement with Rupert in Omagh, etc., are matched by the RUC's "disappearance" of Omagh's perpetrators and crucial evidence, and the Crown's "highest" awards to the perpetrators of the worst atrocities. To think; the White House's "Britain desk" indicates that all of these crimes, including the GFA, served to free up British forces for use against Islam.   The McGeough/O'Hare travesties, the GFA and Omagh and other atrocities and all consequent obstructions of justice are part of US/UK State terrorism on a global scale. If the U.S. ever abandons its plans of world conquest and restores the Republic and its Rule of Law, it will prosecute criminals instead of immunizing them as above. A law-abiding USA. May we live to see the day! The key: discover the pattern of immunized atrocities and corollary.
#260
General discussion / Re: British State Collusion
October 11, 2011, 08:22:19 PM
The children who died in Ireland and Britain since 1968 because of the troubles.


(141 Irish Catholic children)
Murdered by British

Patrick Barnard (13), Dungannon, Co. Tyrone, killed along with James McCaughey (13) and three adult Catholics in British paramilitary car bomb attack.
Daniel Barrett (15), Ardoyne, Belfast; shot in his home from a nearby BA observation post.
John Beattie (17), West Belfast, shot in his father's van by a British army sniper.
James Joseph Boyle (16), West Belfast, abducted and shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
John Boyle (16), Dunloy, Co. Antrim, shot by SAS near an arms dump he had earlier discovered and reported to authorities.
Francis Bradley (16), Ardoyne, Belfast, killed along with three adult Catholics in British paramilitary car bomb attack.
Marian Brown (17), West Belfast, shot in face by British paramilitary terrorists on Roden Street after she kissed her boyfriend goodnight.
Michael Bernard Browne (16), Bangor, Co. Down, shot twice in head by British paramilitary terrorists.
Martha Campbell (13), Ballymurphy Road, Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
John Collins (17), West Belfast, shot by Parachute Reg't soldier at a checkpoint.
Michael Patrick Connors (14), Central Belfast, shot along with John Mahon by British soldiers at a checkpoint.
Patrick Crawford (15), West Belfast, while walking with two others, shot by British soldiers.
James Cromie (13), Belfast, killed along with fourteen other Catholics by British paramilitary car bomb outside McGurk's Pub.
Alphonsus Cunningham (13), West Belfast, during disturbances, run over by a vehicle.
Manus Deery (15), Derry, shot by army sniper as he brought supper home from nearby shop.
Bridget Anne Dempsey (10 months), North Belfast, burned to death along with her mother and father when British paramilitary terrorists firebombed their house at night.
John Dempsey (16), West Belfast, shot by British soldier in disturbances following hunger-strike death of Joe McDonnell.
Breda Devine (20 months), Omagh, killed along with twenty-eight others in a car-bomb massacre by the RUC, Brit army Int. and MI5 and its Chicago FBI operatives.
David Devine (16), Strabane, Tyrone, shot along with two adult Catholics by SAS.
Oran Doherty , Buncrana, Co. Donegal, killed, along with his friend, Sean McLaughlin, in Omagh bombing.
Pauline Doherty (17), North Belfast, in her house, shot six times by British paramilitary terrorists.
James Doherty (4), West Belfast, shot outside his home.
Gerald Donaghy (17), Derry, in civil rights march, killed along with five other Catholic minors and eight Catholic adults on Bloody Sunday, by British soldiers of the Parachute reg't and Royal Anglian reg't, shot in back.
Thomas Donaghy (16), North Belfast, shot dead on way to work along with 18-year-old Margaret McErlean, by British paramilitary terrorists.
Michael Francis Donnelly (14), Silverbridge, Armagh, killed along with two adult Catholics in bomb-and-bullet attack on Donnelly's Bar; by RUC, UDR and British paramilitary terrorists.
John Dougal (16), West Belfast, shot from British army observation bunker.
Jack Duddy (17), Derry, on Bloody Sunday, by British soldiers, shot in back.
Brian Duffy (15), North Belfast, in a taxi stand, died along with driver, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Seamus Duffy (15), North Belfast, shot at close range by RUC rubber bullet.
Bernard Samuel Fox (16), North Belfast, shot by British soldiers.
Margaret Gargan (13), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers who also shot dead Fr. Noel Fitzpatrick as he gave her Last Rites. The bullet that killed Fr. Fitzpatrick passed through him and also killed Patrick Butler. While trying to drag Fr. Fitzpatrick to safety David McCafferty was also shot dead by the soldiers. (The first priest killed was Fr. Hugh Mullan, West Belfast, shot, twice, by British soldiers as he gave Last Rites to another of their victims. An attempt to drag him to safety ended when Frank Quinn was shot dead by the soldiers.)
Rosaleen Gavin eight, North Belfast, shot by British soldiers from an observation post.
Stephen Geddes (10), West Belfast, shot in head at close range by British soldier with rubber bullet.
Gerald Gibson (17), West Belfast, shot in head by British soldiers.
Hugh Gilmore (17), Derry, one of fourteen shot dead on Bloody Sunday.
Rory Gormley (14), West Belfast, while being driven to school by his father, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Desmond Healey (14), West Belfast, shot in back by Parachute Reg't soldier.
Kevin Heatley (12), Newry, Co. Down, shot by British soldier. Kevin's father later committed suicide.
Daniel Hegarty (16), Derry, shot twice in the head by British soldiers.
Terrence Hennebry (17), South Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Clare Hughes (4), North Belfast, in blast of British paramilitary car-bomb outside Benny's Pub.
Michael James Hughes (16), Newry, Co. Down, shot by Royal Marine.
Charles Irvine (16), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers at a checkpoint.
Carol Ann Kelly (11), West Belfast, shot in head by British soldier's rubber bullet as she brought milk home from a nearby shop.
Michael Kelly (17), Derry, shot on Bloody Sunday.
Paul Kelly (17), West Belfast, Shot by British soldiers at a checkpoint.
James Kennedy (15), South Belfast, killed, along with four Catholic adults, in British paramilitary gun attack on betting shop.
James Kerr (17), South Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Julia Livingstone (14), shot in head at close range by a rubber bullet gun mounted on a British armored vehicle.
Brenda Logue (17), Carrickmore, Co. Tyrone, in Omagh atrocity.
Colin Lundy (16), Glengormley, Co. Antrim, burned to death along with his mother when British paramilitary terrorists firebombed their home at 4 a.m.
Eileen Mackin (14), West Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Anne Magee (15), North Belfast, while at work in a grocery, shot in face by British paramilitary terrorists.
Gerald Martin Maginn (17), shot repeatedly in head by RUC.
Andrew Maguire (6 weeks),
Joanne Maguire eight and
John Maguire (2), West Belfast, all crushed by a car when its driver was shot dead by a British soldier. Their mother later committed suicide.
Hugh Maguire (9), West Belfast, hit by British armored vehicle.
John Mahon (16) Belfast, joyriding in stolen car, shot by RUC.
Jolene Marlow (17), Co. Tyrone, in Omagh bomb blast.
Shane McArdle (17), Markethill, Co. Armagh, at a taxi stand, shot along with Gavin McShane, by RUC/British paramilitary terrorists.
Gerald McAuley (15), West Belfast, shot dead along with an adult Catholic, by British paramilitary terrorists who were also burning down the homes of Catholics on Bombay Street and adjacent streets.
Patrick McCabe (17), North Belfast, shot from a nearby Parachute Reg't observation post.
Siobhan McCabe (4), West Belfast, shot near her house by British soldiers.
David McCafferty (14), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers while trying to drag to safety Fr. Fitzpatrick who the soldiers had just shot.
James McCallum (16), West Belfast, in British paramilitary bombing of Murtagh's Pub.
Gary McCartan (17), South Belfast, shot when he opened his front door to British paramilitary terrorists. (British paramilitary terrorists separately murdered his brother, three uncles and a cousin.)
Michael McCartan (16), South Belfast, brother of Gary McCartan, while painting a republican slogan on a wall, shot by RUC.
James Francis McCaughey (13), Dungannon, Co. Tyrone, killed in street along with his friend, Patrick Barnard (13).
David McClenaghan (15), North Belfast, at night in his home, shot by British paramilitary terrorists who also raped his widowed mother.
Stephen McConomy (11), Derry, shot in head by plastic bullet fired from a nearby armored vehicle.
Sean McConville (17), North Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorists from car after asking him directions.
Eamonn McCormick (17), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers during a joint army/British paramilitary attack on a Catholic gathering.
Cornelius McCrory (17), West Belfast, abducted and killed by a British paramilitary terror gang.
Patrick McCullough (17), North Belfast, in a group returning from church, shot by British paramilitary terror gang in a car.
Robert McCullough (17), Belfast, while on lunch-break at work, shot twice in head by British paramilitary terror gang.
Michael McDaid (17), Derry, murdered in custody by British soldiers on Bloody Sunday.
Arthur McDonnell (16) shot along with Charles Irvine, by British soldiers and died years later as a direct consequence.
Anthony McDowell (12), North Belfast, while a passenger in a car, attributed to Parachute Reg't soldiers who deny it.
Kevin McElhinney (17), Derry, shot in the back by British soldiers on Bloody Sunday.
Bernard McErlean (16), West Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terrorist gang abetted by British army.
Annette McGavigan (14), Derry, shot by British soldiers.
James McGerrigan (17), Co. Armagh, in custody, shot by British soldier.
Anthony McGrady (16), North Belfast, at work in auto repair shop, killed along with two Catholic adults in British paramilitary bomb-and-gun attack.
Patrick McGreevey (16), North Belfast, shot by British paramilitary terror gang from a passing car.
Leo McGuigan (16), North Belfast, while walking along Estoril Park, shot by British soldiers.
Doreen McGuinness (16), West Belfast, shot by soldiers at checkpoint.
Francis McGuinness (17), West Belfast, shot by British soldier.
Joseph McGuinness (13), North Belfast, walking with friends to a fish and chip shop, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Maria McGurk (14), North Belfast, daughter of owner of McGurk's Bar, killed along with fourteen others by British paramilitary terrorist bomb attack on the bar.
Geraldine McKeown (14), North Belfast, shot through her window by British paramilitary terrorists.
Sean McLaughlin (12), Buncrana, Co. Donegal, killed in Omagh atrocity.
Kevin McMenamin (10), West Belfast, in blast of a bomb placed by British paramilitary terrorists.
Carol McMenamy (15), North Belfast, shot in head and neck by British paramilitary terrorists in front of her cousin's house. Her brother and cousin were murdered earlier.
Gavin Patrick McShane (17), Keady, Co. Armagh, shot by British paramilitary.
Martin McShane (16), Coalisland, Co. Tyrone, at a GAA club, killed by a burst from a Royal Marine Commando's machine gun.
Paul Jason McWilliams (16), West Belfast, shot in back by British soldier.
Paul Moan (16), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers at a checkpoint.
Maura Monaghan (18 months) Omagh, killed in Omagh bombing described above.
John Mooney (17), North Belfast, shot by British soldiers near his home.
James Morgan (16), Castlewellan, Co. Down, thumbed a lift from strangers who proved to be British paramilitary terrorists who beat him to death and dumped his corpse in a pit used for disposal of dead animals.
Ciaran Gerard Murphy (16), North Belfast, beaten and shot six times by British paramilitary terrorists.
Darren Murray (12), Portadown, Co. Armagh, chased by British paramilitary terrorists into traffic where a car killed him.
Denis Michael Neill (16), North Belfast, while walking home, shot by British soldiers.
Leo Norney (17), West Belfast, shot by British army who first denied then admitted guilt.
Jacqueline O'Brien (17 months) and
Anne Marie O'Brien (5 months), along with their mother, Anna, and father, John, among the thirty-three killed in the car-bomb blasts of 17May74 in Dublin and Monaghan streets placed by BA/RUC/"The Jackal."
Michelle O'Connor (3), South Belfast, killed by a bomb attached to her father's car by British paramilitary terrorists.
Dwayne O'Donnell (17), Co. Tyrone, in front of Boyle's Pub in Cappagh, killed along with four other Catholics by British paramilitary bullet and bomb attack.
Majella O'Hare (12), Whitecross, Co. Armagh, on way, with friends, to Confession, shot by 3 Parachute Reg't soldier.
Geraldine O'Reilly (14), Belturbet, Co. Cavan, while walking with her boyfriend, Patrick Stanley, outside Belturbet Post Office, killed by British paramilitary car-bomb.
Sean O'Riordan (13), West Belfast, shot in back of head by British soldier.
Michelle Osborne (13), Hannahstown, Co. Antrim, killed by British paramilitary terror bomb placed in Ballymacaward Kennel Club.
Martin Peake (17), West Belfast, shot at a checkpoint by a soldier of the Parachute Reg't.
Richard Quinn (10),
Mark Quinn (9) and
Jason Quinn eight, Ballymoney, Co. Antrim, burned to death by British paramilitary terrorists who fire-bombed them in their beds. Their mother had tried to protect them from just such Anti-Catholic attacks by raising them as Protestants; but they were deemed Catholic enough to merit death.
Philip Rafferty (14), South Belfast, abducted from near his home and shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Anthony Reavey (17), Whitecross, Co. Armagh, while hiding under a bed from home invaders, shot dead, along with his two brothers, by British paramilitary terrorists.
Katrina Rennie (16), Craigavon, Co. Armagh, while working in a mobile shop, shots to the head, along with two adults, by a four-man RUC/British paramilitary gang chauffeured by Billy "King Rat" Wright.
James Joseph Reynolds (16), North Belfast, while talking with friends on corner, shot by British paramilitary terrorists on a passing motorcycle.
Francis Anthony Rice (17), Castlewellan, Co. Down, stabbed to death by RUC agent Robin "The Jackal" Jackson.
John Patrick Rolston (16), North Belfast, returning home afoot, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Patrick Rooney (9), West Belfast, while in bed, shot by RUC machine gun through wall.
Daniel Rouse (17), South Belfast, abducted from near home and shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Francis Rowntree (11), West Belfast, shot in the head at close range by British soldiers.
Gabriel Savage (17), South Belfast, while talking with his girlfriend on the sidewalk, abducted and shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
John Joseph Savage (17), West Belfast, shot by British soldiers.
Michael Scott (10), North Belfast, while visiting his grandmother, burned to death along with her when British paramilitary terrorists firebombed her house.
Patrick Stanley (16), Co. Clare, killed in Belturbet, Co. Cavan along with
Geraldine O'Reilly, by British paramilitary car bomb.
Brian Stewart (13), West Belfast, shot in head by plastic bullet at close range by British soldier.
Paula Stronge (6), North Belfast, while playing in street, killed along with four-year-old Clair Hughes, in British paramilitary bombing of Benny's Bar.
Francis Taggart (17), Lisburn, Co. Antrim, while walking home, stabbed by British paramilitary gang.
James Templeton (15), South Belfast, while walking in front of Catholic bar that British paramilitary terrorists shot up after it was opened following an earlier British paramilitary bombing that killed eight adults.
Michael Tighe (17), Craigavon, Co. Armagh, shot by RUC (later exposed by John Stalker as an example of Britain's policy of assassination).
Ronald Trainor (17), Portadown, Co. Armagh, at home, in a British paramilitary gun and bomb attack. His mother, a convert to Catholicism, was consequently murdered by British paramilitary terrorists a year earlier, as was a brother.
Michael Vincent Turner (16), North Belfast, shot in head by British paramilitary terrorists.
Damien Walsh (17), West Belfast, while at work in a shop, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Peter Joseph Watterson (15), West Belfast, in front of his mother's shop, shot in back by British paramilitary terrorists from passing car.
Paul Whitters (15), Derry, shot at close range by RUC plastic bullet.
John Young (17) Derry, shot on Bloody Sunday by British soldiers.

BRITISH (PROTESTANT) CHILDREN (10)

James Barker (15), Buncrana, Co. Donegal, in Omagh bomb atrocity),
William Crawford (17) North Belfast, while in a club, shot by British paramilitary ejected earlier.
Henry Cunningham (17), Collon, Co. Donegal, for associating with Catholics, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Norman Hutchinson (17), South Belfast, for associating with Catholics and dating a Catholic, shot by British paramilitary terrorists.
Samantha McFarland (17), in Omagh atrocity.
Alex Moorehead (16), Newtownstewart, Co. Tyrone, shot by British soldier.
Alan Radford (16), in Omagh atrocity.
Gary Reid (17) East Belfast, shot, along with an adult, by Brit soldier),
William Warnock (15) East Belfast, run over by Brit army vehicle),
Lorraine Wilson (15), in Omagh atrocity.


BRITISH (PROTESTANT) CHILDREN (20)
Murdered by Irish Republicans

John Smyth Bailey (17), North Belfast, while walking near home, shot by republicans.
Jonathan Ball* (3), Warrington, England, killed by IRA bomb set in a trash can.
Linda Boyle (17), West Belfast, in IRA gun and bomb attack on Bayardo Bar in Shankill Road that killed three adults.
Nicholas Brabourne (14), London, aboard Lord Mountbatten's boat in Co. Sligo, killed by IRA bomb, along with Lord Mountbatten (his grandfather) and Paul Maxwell.
Alan Glenn Callaghan (17), Derry, in IRA gun and bomb attack that killed eleven British soldiers in Droppin Well Pub but also killed Valerie Ann McIntyre and three adult civilians.
Danielle Carter (15), Essex, England, while visiting London's financial district, killed, along with two adults, by IRA bomb.
Graeme Dougan (15 months), North Belfast, inadequate warning of IRA bomb.
Mark Frizzell (17), East Belfast, attacked and killed in Catholic district.
Andrew Johnson (17), North Belfast, while working, shot by republicans.

Alan Jack (5 months), Strabane, Co. Tyrone, killed in IRA bomb blast, inadequate warning.
Maurice Knowles (17), North Belfast, while wild-fowling, shot by two 16-year-old Catholics for refusing to hand over his gun.
Paul Maxwell (15) of Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh, killed on Mountbatten's boat.
Alan McCrum (11), Banbridge, Co. Down, killed by IRA car bomb.
Valerie Anne McIntyre (17), Derry, killed in the IRA attack on Bayardo Bar.
Harold Morris (15), West Belfast, near his home, shot by republicans.
Stephen Parker (14), North Belfast, killed by republican car bomb that also killed an adult.
Timothy Perry* (12), Warrington, England, along with Jonathan Ball in IRA bombing.
Joseph Taylor (17), West Belfast, at work, shot by republicans.
Heather Thompson (17), North Belfast, at work in filling station, shot, along with an adult, by republicans.
Francis James Walker (17) Templepatrick, Co. Antrim, killed along with two adult Protestants in IRA gun attack on a bar frequented by Protestants.


FOREIGN CHILDREN (1)

Fernando Velasco Baselga (13), visitor from Spain, killed in Omagh atrocity.
#261
GAA Discussion / Re: Tyrone - Is this the end?
August 09, 2011, 05:59:43 PM
I'm going to make a bold statement. Tyrone could very well win next years all-Ireland. Yes, they might get beat but it wouldn't be by the same manner of defeat as happened in the Dublin game. You have to remember that Dublin themselves suffered heavy defeats to Kerry and Tyrone in the recent past, yet didn't fade away and die. They came back regrouped reorganized and are now only seventy minutes from contesting an all-Ireland. Fair play to them they have showed a lot of character.

IF Tyrone want to give themselves every chance posable there is no time like the present. The first approach would be to call a special meeting with all the players on the panel and the County board. A structured plan should be drawn up and put in place for the new season. What I would like to see is the work load at the top being divided out more. Older players on the panel have a huge roll still to play and could be assigned to go scouting through the various divisions to look for "hidden" talent. Every club should be emailed to see for example if they want to suggest some of their own members to go to trials. Something like the underdogs. So no one can say they weren't given a chance.

The league this year should be taken very seriously. Its imperative Tyrone get back into division one. To win division two with several new players would establish a renewed confidance and would be a great plat form to start the championship campaign. A lot of Counties look upon Tyrone with envy. To win five minor all-Irelands in eleven years in todays game shows great commitment. However the work must commence right now at senior level. Roll the sleves up and get the show on the road, it could be a tough hard slog but the reward is more than worth it.
#262
GAA Discussion / Re: Pic of the week
July 27, 2011, 08:41:39 PM
Quote from: ziggysego on July 27, 2011, 05:38:59 PM
Surprised this hasn't be posted yet.