News

But both loyalist and republican politicians ... to be a big tourist attraction — the images in east Belfast are the first new paramilitary murals to appear. PUP councillor for the area John ...
He patrols the walls of Protestant unionist-loyalist (PUL ... and here are pictures to remind you.'" The history of the Belfast murals is rooted in territorialism and propaganda, but Rolston ...
Consequently, Loyalist murals became more militaristic ... Ross Wilson located in the Village, South Belfast | Photo by Charles McQuillan/Getty Images Yet since the Good Friday Agreement, things ...
On a pale wintry morning in working-class East Belfast, hooded men with ... paramilitary groups to give up nine murals which have been painted over with images of "cultural treasures we can ...
In the second of two reports, the BBC News website's Marie Irvine reports on the moves to change the face of some of east ... The painted images often feature balaclava clad men, in guns and ...
I am in Belfast, just off Falls ... I cross the street to inspect a mural advocating for the Gaelic language and another depicting global freedom fighters. Images of Frederick Douglass, Harriet ...
“Yet [Loyalist] murals celebrating the Protestant ... “If you come back from a trip to Belfast, you don’t want pictures of [soccer legend] George Best,” notes professor Rolston.
In Belfast I thought I would take a look at the old trouble spots in the Falls and Shankill Roads of West Belfast, so familiar from TV news images ... look at a mural of a masked loyalist ...
stands near a mural he worked on on the peace line in West Belfast (Paul McErlane) The clashes had started in loyalist areas, the result, say community leaders, of anger and frustration.
Consequently, Loyalist murals became more militaristic ... Ross Wilson located in the Village, South Belfast | Photo by Charles McQuillan/Getty Images Yet since the Good Friday Agreement, things ...
stands near a mural he worked on on the peace line in West Belfast (Paul McErlane) The clashes had started in loyalist areas, the result, say community leaders, of anger and frustration.