One Former Soldier To Be Charged Over Bloody Sunday
Soldiers had been sent into the Bogside nationalist housing estate in Londonderry to deal with riots.
Soldiers had been sent into the Bogside nationalist housing estate in Londonderry to deal with riots.
The decision on whether to prosecute ex-British soldiers over the Bloody Sunday shootings in Northern Ireland will be delivered tomorrow.
The early release scheme currently covers offences committed between 1973 and 1998.
Martin McGuinness was posthumously awarded the Certificate of Honour by San Francisco.
Northern Ireland's victims' commissioner said in her recommendations that "transparency is key".
It's just days before an announcement on whether the soldiers will face charges linked to the killings on Bloody Sunday.
The families said in a statement: "We will not meet her and have one request for Mrs Bradley and that is for her to resign immediately."
Karen Bradley's comments provoked strong criticism from outraged victims of the security forces and nationalist political leaders.
The 67-year-old was previously accused of the murders of four soldiers in the 1982 IRA Hyde Park bombing but the trial collapsed five years ...
"We are so excited to have this here, I mean how often do you get to see something that's been in space."
Four veterans, in their 60s and 70s, could face murder charges in connection with Bloody Sunday.
An inquest has been examining the deaths of Lance Corporal James Ross and Rifleman Darren Mitchell.
The impressive silverware was designed to create a lasting legacy for a British soldier who died in an IRA bombing in 1996
The alleged incident took place after two soldiers took their own lives at Ballykinler Barracks.
Rifleman Darren Mitchell was found dead in his room at Ballykinler Barracks in February 2013.
An inquest into the deaths of two soldiers has started in Northern Ireland.