News

New food hygiene ratings have been awarded to 19 of Fermanagh and Omagh’s establishments, ... Zero Gradi at 4 The Brook, Windmill Hill ... Acai + Me at 34a Main Street, Fintona; rated on ...
Omagh families ‘woefully let down’ by police, father of victim tells inquiry Victor Barker told the Omagh Bombing Inquiry that his son James’s life had been taken away from him in the most ...
The Omagh Bombing Inquiry is continuing to hear personal statements from those affected by the 1998 Real IRA atrocity. ... and enter through George’s Street and down past the courthouse to avoid it.
The sister of a young Spanish woman killed in the Omagh bombing has described a public inquiry into the atrocity as “allowing us to close a wound that has been open for 26 years”. Rocio Abad ...
Omagh bombing victim Sean McGrath: his three children described the pain of recalling how their father died, saying it is 'too emotional to examine' and a wound that may never heal.
After a lengthy construction period, Louisville's East Jefferson Street will open to two-way vehicle traffic Sunday, Mayor Craig Greenberg announced Tuesday. The conversion of the mile-long ...
The attack on Omagh's Market Street on a busy shopping day was the worst single atrocity in the history of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Church bells tolled and a minute's silence was held at 1510 ...
Police officers and firefighters inspecting the damage caused by a bomb explosion in Market Street, Omagh in 1998 (Paul McErlane/PA) “At home he made the relationships between everyone easy.
Emergency service workers have been giving evidence to the Omagh Bombing Inquiry, describing scenes which “should only have been seen in a movie”. Twenty-nine people, including a woman ...
Omagh inquiry ‘allowing us to close wound that has been open for 26 years’ The sister of a young Spanish woman killed in the 1998 atrocity said it was the only support they had had in many years.
The sister of a young Spanish woman killed in the Omagh bombing has described a public inquiry into the atrocity as “allowing us to close a wound that has been open for 26 years”.
The sister of a young Spanish woman killed in the Omagh bombing has described a public inquiry into the atrocity as “allowing us to close a wound that has been open for 26 years”.