1979 in Northern Ireland

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1979
in
Northern Ireland

Centuries:
Decades:
See also:

Events during the year 1979 in Northern Ireland.

Incumbents[edit]

Events[edit]

January to March[edit]

  • 5 January – Two members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) are killed in Ardoyne, Belfast, when the car bomb they are transporting explodes prematurely.[1]
  • 4 February – A former prison officer and his wife are shot dead at their home in Oldpark Road, Belfast, by the IRA.[1]
  • 20 February – Eleven Loyalists, known as the Shankill Butchers, are sentenced to life imprisonment for 112 offences, including nineteen sectarian murders.[1][2]
  • 24 February – Two Catholic teenagers, mistaken in the dark for a British Army foot patrol, are killed by the IRA in a remote-controlled bomb explosion at Darkley, County Armagh.[1]
  • 16 March – The Bennett Report, investigating allegations of ill treatment of people held in interrogation centres in Northern Ireland, is published and Government undertakes to implement major recommendations.[1]
  • 22 March – The IRA kills Richard Sykes, British Ambassador to the Netherlands, and his Dutch valet, in a gun attack in The Hague, Netherlands.[3]
  • 22 March – The IRA carries out a series of attacks across Northern Ireland with 24 bomb explosions.[1]
  • 30 March – Airey Neave, Conservative Party Spokesman on Northern Ireland, is killed by an Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) booby-trap bomb attached to his car at the House of Commons, London.[3]

April to June[edit]

July to September[edit]

Sport[edit]

Football[edit]

Winners: Linfield
Winners: Cliftonville 3 – 2 Portadown

Motorcycling[edit]

Births[edit]

January to June[edit]

July to December[edit]

Deaths[edit]

Full date unknown[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "A Chronology of the Conflict – 1979". Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN). Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  2. ^ Larkspirit Irish History Archived 23 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b "Sutton Index of Deaths – 1979". Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN). Archived from the original on 9 January 2010. Retrieved 29 January 2010.