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Ethnic cleansing in the UK: some of the 600 Ulster homes emptied by the mobs in 10 days

Article Abstract:

The Royal Ulster Constabulary believes that an estimated over 600 Catholic and Protestant families in Northern Ireland have been forced from their homes by the other side. A 23-year-old single mother, Nadine McCauley, is among Protestants living in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, who have been driven from their homes by men in masks with petrol bombs, whom they believe are Catholics furious about the march along Garvaghy road. Bernie is a Catholic from Portadown, Northern Ireland, whose family has been driven from their home after threats, and fear for their lives.

Author: Moyes, Jojo, Kee, Robert
Publisher: Financial Times Ltd.
Publication Name: The Independent
Subject: Retail industry
ISSN: 0951-9467
Year: 1996
Demonstrations and protests

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A world of anguish in an inch of glass

Article Abstract:

UK experts are claiming that legislation covering frozen human embryos, which has resulted in the destruction of over 3,300 of them, is faulty. Dr. Peter Brinsden, from Cambridge's Bourn Hall Clinic, where up to 900 embryos have been allowed to die, would have preferred to have heard this news a fortnight earlier, as it has been painful letting the embryos die after putting so much effort into producing them. The doctor has saved six embryos on the instructions of parents, but one request for an extension of storage did not arrive on time.

Author: Moyes, Jojo
Publisher: Financial Times Ltd.
Publication Name: The Independent
Subject: Retail industry
ISSN: 0951-9467
Year: 1996
United Kingdom, Laws, regulations and rules, Storage, Human embryo, Frozen human embryos

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The Ulster ceasefire: six beatings, three shootings and two bombings

Article Abstract:

A ceasefire has been imposed for three weeks in Northern Ireland, and there have been two hoax devices, one petrol bomb, a hotel bombing, three shootings and six beatings in this period. The police and politicans are concerned that the peace process is endangered by the level of violence. Low-level violence has not decreased since the ceasefire, according to the organization Families Against Violence, which argues that victims often do not dare to report threats.

Author: Moyes, Jojo, Brown, Colin
Publisher: Financial Times Ltd.
Publication Name: The Independent
Subject: Retail industry
ISSN: 0951-9467
Year: 1997
Ethnic relations, Military aspects

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Subjects list: Northern Ireland
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