News

Twenty-nine people died in August 1998 in the single biggest atrocity of the Northern Ireland Troubles.
Ireland must hold a “similar process in parallel” to the Omagh bomb inquiry, the Irish Foreign Affairs Minister has been urged. Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris announced on ...
The highly-anticipated 183rd Omagh Show returns on Friday and Saturday, July 4 and 5, aiming to deliver a dynamic celebration of ...
Seventy bands will be taking part in the annual pre-Twelfth parade in the village of Moneymore on Friday evening.
The Omagh Bombing Inquiry is harrowing, but if we listen properly to family testimonies, there's a chance to prevent dark days yet to come.
A woman who suffered horrific burns in the Omagh bombing has explained how she was given only a 20% chance of survival and was administered the last rites four times in hospital following the ...
Families of Omagh bomb victims have welcomed the ordering of an independent inquiry into the atrocity. Twenty-nine people, including a woman pregnant with twins, were killed when a dissident ...
Relatives of those killed in the Omagh bombing will gather today to mark the 25th anniversary of the worst atrocity ever committed in Northern Ireland.
Omagh victims and their families deserve better than ‘there was no alternative’ to violence The distress, like the devil, is in the details.
The stage is set for one of Northern Ireland’s most beloved agricultural events as the 183rd Omagh Show returns this summer, promising two packed days of entertainment, competition, and community ...
Families impacted by the Omagh bombing will be “satisfied” by steps taken by the Government to co-operate with the inquiry into the atrocity, the Justice Minister has said.
The United Kingdom will hold a public inquiry to question whether the 1998 car bombing in Omagh, Ireland, which killed 29 people, could have been prevented.