The loyalist paramilitary group the Ulster Defence Association is under pressure to prove its declaration of a 12-month ceasefire to boost the political process is genuine. Loyalist politicians ...
The security forces allegedly permitted loyalist terrorists to import and distribute a shipment of weapons for use in a ...
The High Court has heard claims that the security forces permitted loyalist paramilitaries to import and distribute a ...
Belfast City Council has said it has made changes to security at Roselawn cemetery and crematorium in response to concerns ...
The Ulster Freedom Fighters and Ulster Defence Association have announced a 12-month ceasefire. In a statement issued through the Ulster Political Research Group, the paramilitary organisations ...
The largest loyalist paramilitary groups throughout the Troubles were the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and they remain the largest active groups.
In 1972, IRA violence led to the emergence of the second main loyalist paramilitary group, the Ulster Defence Association (UDA). Initially it was what its name suggested, a "defence" organisation ...
The Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF), the military wing of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), admitted last night that it killed one of its leading members, Jim Craig, because he had been spying ...
and Ulster Defence Association (UDA). Givan had previously defended his meeting, adding that nobody other than him will dictate which schools should open or close. The Department for Communities ...