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Politics | Message 86% | 23 Oct 2002
Checkmate, it seems Niall Stokes
Has a series of raids by the PSNI on Sinn Fein offices allowed David Trimble to pass the buck?

Politics | Hog 73% | 15 Dec 2000
The North Dermot Stokes
The north did not witness such seismic changes in Y2K as it had in preceding years. But there was still plenty going on, as a society in which war had become the norm stumbled towards peace.

Hot Features | Interview 68% | 31 Mar 2004
Chucky Bob Sam Snort
According to our political correspondent, Bob Dylan’s upcoming gig in Stormont marks a diefinitive end to the war. Hurray!

Politics | Frontlines 67% | 15 Sep 1999
Death On The Doorstep Eamonn McCann
RAYTHEON, the armament-technology firm which manufactured Patriot and Sidewinder missiles, is establishing a plant in Derry and the local politicians couldn t be happier. EAMONN McCANN reports.

Hot Features | Commentary 67% | 14 Dec 2001
All human life was here (part 1) Staff Writer
Superstars, rock stars, movie stars, sports stars, tv stars, authors, actors, artists, comedians, politicians, broadcasters, astrologers, chefs, outlaws, weirdoes, dingbats and Lee Scratch Perry...

Politics | Hog 65% |  2 Aug 2002
Screwing the pooch The Hog
Is this the summer of our discontent? Well, it sure ain't no holiday

Politics | Hog 65% |  8 Nov 2001
Don’t look back in anger The Whole Hog
Those who dwell in the past face an uncertain future

Politics | Frontlines 64% | 16 Oct 2002
David Ervine Olaf Tyaransen
A former member of the UVF, David Ervine was jailed in 1974 on explosives charges. His paramilitary past notwithstanding, he has emerged in recent years as one of the most impressive politicians in Northern Ireland. The subject of a new biography by Henry Sinnerton, here he talks about Johnny Adair, drink, drugs, his family and the crisis facing Unionism that threatens to derail the peace process

Music | Interview 64% | 12 Apr 2001
Angels With Dirty Faces John Walshe
John Walshe travels to Berlin to see Ash in superlative live form on Paddy's night. And no wonder: the band reckon their new album, free all angels could put them in the Michael Jackson league! plus: why they're so down on Louis Walsh, Westlife and Ronan Keating and so up for Bono, John Hume, David Trimble and - wait for it - Darius of Popstars. Flash photography: Mella Travers

Politics | Message 64% |  3 Mar 1999
The Naked Truth Niall Stokes
TO fashion a figleaf. At first it may not seem like the hardest thing to do.

Music | Interview 63% | 29 Mar 2001
John Kelly Peter Murphy
The man behind the Mystery Train is a bit of a mystery himself but, at Peter Murphy's request, writer and broadcaster JOHN KELLY steps forward to talk about Enniskillen, friends in high places, the fall and rise of his broadcasting career, his lack of intercourse with Dave Trimble, "taking the soup", desert island music and Uaneen. Broadcast Views: Cathal Dawson

Music | Hit the North 57% | 23 Nov 2000
it was young and it was beautiful Colin Carberry
A few hours after Bono hoisted up Trimble and Hume s arms at the Yes show, I found myself trying to buy drinks at a city centre bar and having a strange conversation with a well known local politician. A prominent face during the pro-Agreement campaign, I d assumed that he d be delighted with the way that the gig had panned out. But no, he shrugged off the entire occasion as a bubbly inconsequence and said that the Yes camp would be lucky to get 68% of the vote. For someone convinced that his cause was on the cusp of a massive historical defeat, he didn t appear to be overly upset. In fact, he seemed happy enough showing off his Larry Mullan Jr autograph and blaming the Unionists.

Politics | Message 54% |  2 Aug 2001
Keeping their eyes on the prize Niall Stokes
At the time of writing, we are in a state of suspended animation. The new, so-called Blueprint for the North which has been hammered together over the past fortnight by the Irish and British governments is finished.

Politics | McCann 54% | 29 Nov 2001
All round the houses Eamonn McCann
The Belfast Agreement appears to offer stability at the price of sectarian stalemate

Politics | Hog 45% | 15 Jan 2003
Our friends in the North The Hog
 

Politics | Hog 45% | 29 Mar 2002
Of saints and celebrities The Hog
Big brother is watching us, and we're watching big brother

Politics | Frontlines 45% |  4 Aug 1999
Mr Liver Man Nell McCafferty
As revelations continue about CHARLES J. HAUGHEY s finances, NELL McCAFFERTY looks at the lifestyle of our politicians.

Politics | Frontlines 44% | 13 May 1998
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION Stuart Bailie
U2 and Ash played Belfast to support the Yes Vote in the Belfast Agreement. Hot Press columnist Stuart Bailie was the compére for the evening. And it rocked, big style.

Politics | Hog 44% | 19 Dec 2003
It's grim up north The Hog
There are those who argue that the best that Northern Ireland can hope for is dreariness. They’ll have been disappointed this year, so. It’s been grim instead, and right from the off.

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 14 Apr 1999
Glory Days Nell McCafferty
Gloria Steinem was 65 last month; Germaine Greer was 60; Jill Johnston was 70. There are some who will not understand the resonance of this roll-call of veterans they are doubtless too busy poring over the latest edict of the Catholic Church, which holds that maturbation is not always a sin. Ho-hum. Listen up wankers, while I tell you how it was when real women strode the earth.

Politics | Hog 39% | 21 Jul 1999
The Song Remains The Same The Whole Hog
The Whole Hog looks, with foreboding, at developments in the North

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 27 May 1998
RUM, SODOMY ... THE SASH Stuart Bailie
It's Friday, May 22. The votes haven't even been counted yet, but already a succession of post-ballot parties are taking place. Your prime location is the Mandela Hall at Queens University Belfast, where a few hundred groovers will congregate around an event organised by those feverish tykes from the local music magazine, Blank. The name of the game is 'Keep Ulster Brattish' and admission is a mere quid.

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 27 May 1998
RUM, SODOMY ... THE SASH Stuart Bailie
It's Friday, May 22. The votes haven't even been counted yet, but already a succession of post-ballot parties are taking place. Your prime location is the Mandela Hall at Queens University Belfast, where a few hundred groovers will congregate around an event organised by those feverish tykes from the local music magazine, Blank. The name of the game is 'Keep Ulster Brattish' and admission is a mere quid.

Politics | Hog 39% | 17 Dec 2003
The year of two fingers The Hog
The Whole Hog and other regular Hot Press columnists, look back on a year in which, with some notable exceptions, the message seemed to be – up yours.

Politics | Hog 39% | 19 Jul 2001
High On The Hog The Hog
On the West Coast of the USA, people still hold Ireland in high esteem - why?

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 29 Apr 1998
fear ... loathing Niall Stanage
Yes, you've read that headline somewhere before! But referendum on the Belfast Agreement gets into full swing in the North. Diary: NIALL STANAGE. Pix: peter matthews

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 29 Apr 1998
fear ... loathing Niall Stanage
Yes, you've read that headline somewhere before! But referendum on the Belfast Agreement gets into full swing in the North. Diary: NIALL STANAGE. Pix: peter matthews

Politics | Frontlines 38% |  3 Feb 2000
Rebel Rebel Niall Stanage
Jailed in the '70s and '80s for gun-running and membership of the IRA, Kerry-born MARTIN FERRIS was one of the most senior Republican figures in the south to throw his weight behind the Sinn Fiin-backed peace process. Now, a Kerry County Councillor with ambitions to take a Dail seat, Ferris has earned a particular reputation for being tough on drugs in his native Tralee. Interview: NIALL STANAGE.

Politics | Frontlines 38% |  3 Mar 1999
A Question Of Fait The Hot Press Newsdesk
Vincent McKenna is making quite a name for himself. He is the fellow who runs Families Against Intimidation and Terror (FAIT) in Belfast.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 29 Nov 2004
How Much Do The British Government Know About The Murder Of Pat Finucane? Tara Brady
There is inescapable evidence that British security forces colluded in the murder of defence lawyer, Pat Finucane. But now Michael Finucane wants to know just how high the responsibilty for the crime really goes.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 11 May 2000
West Life Tom Mathews
Yes readers, it s that time of year again when TOM MATHEWS hacks his way through the vin and verbiage of dear old Galway town for the cuirt festival of literature.

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  5 Aug 1998
The Billy Boy Niall Stanage
A defining personality of the seismic changes in Northern Ireland, Billy Hutchinson is a paramilitary turned politician, a convicted UVF murderer who spent 16 years in the Maze and who will now represent the PUP in the new Assembly. But if Hutchinson has abandoned violence, it hasn’t altogether abandoned him. As he reveals in this interview with niall stanage, there have been three attempts on his life by the INLA in the last 18 months. Pics: Michael Taylor.

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  8 Jul 1998
TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE NORTH Niall Stanage
The winds of change have been blowing through Northern Ireland in 1998, with the endorsement of the Belfast Agreement and the establishment of the Assembly. But that only made it more likely that extreme loyalists would portray the march to Drumcree church near Portadown, and the July 12th parades, as an opportunity for Protestants and Orangemen to make a final stand. It was surely shaping up for a season of discontent – until the Quinn brothers were murdered in a loyalist sectarian petrol bomb attack on their home. By Niall Stanage. Photos: Peter Matthews.

Music | Interview 37% | 11 Oct 2001
Out of Afrika James Kelleher
JAMES KELLEHER meets the big daddy of hip-hop, AFRIKA BAMBAATAA

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 18 Aug 1999
Triumph In Adversity Joe Jackson
At a time when public disillusionment with politicians is arguably at an all-time high, Cork Fianna Fail MEP BRIAN CROWLEY continues to buck the national trend by commanding a huge personal vote. But then, this is not a man who fits easily into any obvious political mould. A former rock singer and still a passionate music fan, he has survived a near-fatal car crash and learned to live with a permanent disability resulting from an earlier life-changing accident in his teens. Here, the man many tip to be a future President of Ireland, talks candidly to JOE JACKSON about matters personal and political. Pics: COLM HENRY.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 11 Jun 2007
He’s the son of a preacher man Jason O'Toole
His father, the Rev. Ian Paisley, has been one of the dominant figures in Irish politics over the past 40 years. Now Ian Paisley Jnr is a Junior Minister in the new Northern Ireland administration. So how different is he from his father? And how does he feel about cross border co-operation, education, abortion and homosexuality?

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  2 Apr 1997
EXPORTINGthemisery Stuart Bailie
Over 2,000 Northern Irish women leave the province every year to have abortions elsewhere usually in England. STUART BAILIE examines the many anomalies in the law on this subject, and talks to some of the people fighting to change it.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 15 Oct 2003
Gerry Adams Olaf Tyaransen
There’s no pipe of peace – in fact no pipe at all from the non-smoking sinn féin leader – as Olaf Tyaransen asks if, given Osama Bin Laden’s use of terror as a political weapon, Gerry Adams might not have some sympathy for the world’s most wanted man. that question and other contentious queries relating to the IRA, Jean McConville and the murder of Garda Jerry McCabe are dealt with in an interview which also takes in Eoghan Harris, George Bush and Bono, and ends with the interviewee humming a familiar Monty Python tune.

Music | Interview 36% | 31 May 2006
Mind, Lightbody & soul Stuart Clark
Snow Patrol‘s Gary Lightbody may be the thinking woman’s indie sexpot, but with their new album Eyes Open going supernova all over the shop, the poor fella has no time to capitalise on his status, given that the only people he sees on a regular basis are his band and crewmates. With whom, he assures us, “penetrative sex is out of the question.” Also on the agenda: break-ups, infidelity, the Northern body politic, U2 and, of course, underpants.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  2 Apr 2008
Speaking his mind Jason O'Toole
For over three decades, the political agitator and columnist Eoghan Harris has been the focus of abundant controversy, consistently raising hackles with views that are seldom less than heretical.

Politics | Message 36% | 17 Feb 2000
IN THE SHADOW OF THE GUNMEN Niall Stokes
JUST when you thought it was safe to go back into the water, the jetty collapses. On Friday afternoon last, it was hard to escape an awful, mournful sense of dij` vu, as the word came in on the mojo wire that the new devolved institutions of governance in Northern Ireland had been suspended, and direct rule from Britain reimposed.

Music | News 36% | 20 Feb 2002
"A moral imperative" The Hot Press Newsdesk
Speaking in London, Bob Geldof helps launch a new fundraising drive to pay for the civil suit against the Omagh bombers

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  9 Nov 2000
Kevin Myers Joe Jackson
Best known for his Irish Times column An Irishman s Diary, KEVIN MYERS has been denounced as arrogant, bigoted, pompous and prejudiced. And those are just the people who like his witty writing! On the occasion of the publication of a collection of his writings, the journalist they either love or loathe talks to JOE JACKSON about class, prostitution, drugs, relationships, the North, Mary Ellen Synon and more. Photography: CATHAL DAWSON

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  6 Aug 1997
northern EXPOSURE? Olaf Tyaransen
A top American psychologist claims she has unearthed disturbing evidence of CIA involvement with British Intelligence in Northern Ireland. Olaf Tyaransen reports.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 29 Oct 1997
ULSTER SAYS MO! Joe Jackson
As Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, MO MOWLAM M.P. has one of the toughest, most thankless jobs in British and Irish politics. The task facing her is an unenviable one: to bring together the two extremes of both traditions, however briefly, for the purposes of all-party talks. In this exclusive interview, she talks about the difficult journey to date, and the immense challenges which lie ahead of her. Our man who went to Mo: JOE JACKSON. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 25 May 2000
No More Mr Nice Guy Joe Jackson
The recipient of a Late Late Show tribute and the outgoing presenter of The Arts Show, MIKE MURPHY avails of a timely opportunity to reflect on the highs and lows of his personal and professional life and to assure JOE JACKSON that, contrary to certain popular mythology, he is neither a marshmallow nor a flowerpot man

Politics | Message 34% | 21 Jan 1998
The State Of The Union Niall Stokes
I M looking again now at a picture taken at the funeral of the West Belfast taxi driver John McColgan, who was murdered by the LVF. In the centre is Lorraine McColgan, John s wife, her face contorted with crying, her body doubled over in grief.

Politics | McCann 32% | 25 Mar 2002
The voice of the future Niall Stokes
The major political event in the Republic was the abortion referendum. Hotpress made its position clear in the run-up to that particular farce, but the polls were telling us that it was going to be a Yes vote

Hot Features | Sam Snort 32% | 22 Feb 1995
WHERE PROD MEETS PROD Sam Snort
At the time of writing, the “framework document” on Norn Iron is about to be published. It is a time of great expectation, of high tension, of fearful imaginings, for all parties involved in the Northern conflict, and, of course, for Sam Snort.

Film Review | Film 31% | 18 Sep 2003
The Italian Job Tara Brady
 

Politics | Message 30% | 23 Jul 1997
NO TURNING BACK Niall Stokes
WHERE S the emotion? Where s the elation? Where s the celebration? It s an odd sensation indeed. There s a feeling that the words of acclamation should come pouring out but they don t. They don t and they won t.

Politics | Message 30% |  8 Jul 1998
FANNING THE FLAMES Niall Stokes
WAKE up. Look at yourself in the mirror, Ian Paisley. What do you see? There’s three children’s faces there. Tight cropped hair. Grins from ear to ear.

Politics | McCann 29% | 17 Mar 1999
Abortion And The North Eamonn McCann
It s easy to assume that attitudes in the North never change, but the pro-lifers don t think so, and they re right.

Politics | Message 29% | 18 Mar 1998
Nothing But The Same Old Story Niall Stokes
WE RE heading for some kind of watershed, I m told. And yet, no matter how hard I try, there s nothing happening in the Northern peace talks that I can become even the remotest bit enthused about.

Politics | Message 29% | 15 Sep 1999
Mo And The Moral Maze Niall Stokes
WHO would want the job? Mo Mowlam was riding high in the wake of the Good Friday agreement last year; at that stage, she was entitled to feel that she had actually contributed something substantial to bringing about a peaceful solution to the awful conflict that has disfigured life in Northern Ireland for so long.

Politics | McCann 29% |  5 Mar 2008
People have the power Eamonn McCann
How Ian Paisley's own community came to deem him surplus to requirements.

Hot Features | Sam Snort 28% |  8 Apr 2002
Towards a new republic Sam Snort
Sam delivers the proclamation for a new Ireland

Politics | McCann 28% | 18 Feb 2003
  Eamonn McCann
why unionists and nationalists helplessly wring their hands at job losses but go on the offensive over a city's name; the origin of the "axis of evil"; and a hail of abuse to the chief

Politics | McCann 28% | 29 Oct 2009
Mass Appeal Eamonn McCann
Did you know it was illegal to sell mass cards not authorised by the Catholic Church? Only in a banana republic.

Politics | Message 28% | 13 Sep 2001
The evil of sectarianism Niall Stokes
There had been a working assumption that, in the thirty-plus years of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, we had just about seen it all. But last week proved otherwise

Music | Hit the North 28% |  8 Jul 1998
A (HALF) LIFE LESS ORDINARY Stuart Bailie
At Rockfield Studios in Wales, the peaceful midsummer setting is interrupted by the roar of a tractor.

Politics | McCann 28% | 18 Feb 2003
The name calling game Eamonn McCann
why unionists and nationalists helplessly wring their hands at job losses but go on the offensive over a city's name; the origin of the "axis of evil"; and a hail of abuse to the chief

Politics | McCann 28% | 30 Apr 1997
BLAIR AND ADAMS: SPOT THE DIFFERENCE Eamonn McCann
That s it, then. Or will be by the time most of you read this. Five more years of conservative government. Logical enough that most political journos from across the water that I talk to tell me to expect no change. One man who went to Mo reports back that Mowlam follows the straight Mayhew line: her security advisers will be the arbiters of any new ceasefire.

Politics | McCann 27% | 13 Nov 2003
This is the s.e.a. Eamonn McCann
That's the socialist environmental alliance. Eamonn McCann explains why you should vote for him, and them, in the Northern elections

Politics | McCann 27% |  7 Aug 2002
Another brick in the peace wall Eamonn McCann
Why the Belfast Agreement has led to an entrenchment of sectarian positions. Plus: the hero of the fortnight is a deaf man in a Brisbane court

Politics | McCann 27% | 28 Feb 2005
Pope, John & Paul Eamonn McCann
The hitherto undisclosed links between 'Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds' and Our Lady Of Fatima. Plus: Why the current impasse in the Peace Process reveals the fatal flaw in the Good Friday Agreement.

Politics | McCann 27% |  8 Sep 2004
The strange case of the Belfast 5 Eamonn McCann
Plus the dissident Republican they’re trying to frame. and whatever happened to Kevin Boyle?

Politics | McCann 27% | 26 Apr 2005
Left Wing Cross Eamonn McCann
Football fans in North Korea enjoy a good deal more freedom than many might have suspected. Plus: The story behind John Hume and David Trimble’s decision to bring arms manufacturer Raytheon to Derry and why Skruf are one of the bands to look out for in 2005.

Politics | McCann 27% | 30 Mar 2000
Kow-Towing To Clinton Eamonn McCann
EAMONN McCANN casts a critical eye over the record of the US president, and the claims made on behalf of the man who wants to succeed him.

Politics | McCann 26% | 28 Aug 2007
“I Screamed And Screamed But No One Answered...” Eamonn McCann
When 28 people died in an Israeli massacre at Qana, Lebanon, the Derry Anti-War Coalition occupied Derry's Raytheon Plant. Eamon McCann reports on their visit to Qana.

 

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