A Chronology of Key Events
in Irish History


The following is a very brief listing of events that has created the current climate in Northern Ireland.  We favor no position over another and any tendency to do so is unintentional.  Our purpose is simply to provide background information.  For a more complete study of the events, please visit the CAIN Project.  We thank the CAIN Project for allowing us to abridge their information for our site.


1170    Arrival of Normans in County Wexford.  Arrival of Earl of Pembroke ('Strongbow').

1171    'Strongbow' became King of Leinster.

1366    Statutes of Kilkenny were introduced to try to stop the assimilation of the 'English born in Ireland' into the Gaelic way of life.

1595    Hugh O'Neill, the Earl of Tyrone, rebelled against Elizabeth I in an attempt to preserve the Gaelic way of life.

1603    Tudor conquest of Ireland completed.  English law enforced throughout Ireland.

1606    Scottish settlers were 'planted' in the Ards peninsula area of Ulster.

1608 (and onwards)    Plantation of confiscated land in Ulster began.  Plantations were planned and carried out in a number of areas of the region including Derry.

1641    Only 59% of land in Ireland held by Catholics.  Catholic-Gaelic Rebellion in an attempt to regain confiscated lands.

1649    Cromwell's army left Britain for Ireland.

1650    Catholic landowners were exiled to Connaught.  Cromwell's army left Ireland.

1688    Approximately 22% of land held by Catholics.  James II deposed as King in England.
7 December    The gates of the city walls in Derry were shut against the troops of James II, beginning the Siege of Derry.

1689
28 July    The Siege of Derry ended.
James II landed in Ireland with French support.

1690    William III (William of Orange) arrived at Carrickfergus.
July     William III defeated James II at the Battle of the Boyne.

1691    Catholic forces were defeated at the Battle of Aughrim.  Limerick surrendered.

1695    The first of the 'Penal Laws' were enacted against Catholics in Ireland.  The last of the 'Penal Laws' were not overturned until 1829.

1714    Approximately 7% of land in Ireland held by Catholics.

1782    The Irish Parliament won legislative independence from the British Parliament.

1795
September    Formation of the Loyal Orange Institution (Orange Order) in County Armagh.

1796
12 July    First parade held to commemorate the Battle of the Boyne.

1800    The Act of Union passed; to take effect 1 January 1801.

1813    "Battle of Garvagh" between Catholic 'Ribbonmen' and Orangemen.

1814    Apprentice Boys of Derry formed.

1823    Daniel O'Connell's Catholic Association, which campaigned for Catholic emancipation, was formed.

1825    The Unlawful Societies Act was passed which proscribed the Catholic Association and the Orange Order.

1829
July    Fierce riots in Belfast followed the banning of the 12 July parades.  Rioting spread to County Armagh and County Tyrone and resulted in at least 20 deaths.

1832 - 1844    Party Procession Acts enforced to control public demonstrations.

1845 - 1849    The Great Famine in Ireland.  The first cases of blight in the potato crop occurred in Ireland leading to famine.

1857
July    Ten days of serious rioting in Belfast following clashes surrounding the Orange Order parades on 12 July.

1867
12 July    Orangemen march in County Down in defiance of a ban on parades.

1868    Protestant Church was disestablished in Ireland.

1872    Rioting in Belfast following Catholic Lady Day march.

1905    Sinn Féin founded under Arthur Griffith.

1913
January    Ulster Volunteer Force formed and began drilling.
November    Irish Citizen Army and Irish National Volunteers formed.

1916
April    Easter Rising in Dublin, which began on Easter Monday (24 April), lasted for a week before being put down.

1921
12 July    In the wake of partition, Northern Ireland saw a lot of rioting, and July was particularly bad.  Clashes between Catholics and Protestants on the 12th July resulted in 23 deaths and the destruction of over 200 Catholic homes. 

1922    Widespread violence in Northern Ireland with approximately 232 people killed and roughly 1,000 injured.
August    Michael Collins killed.  Death of Arthur Gfiffith.
7 December    The six counties of Northern Ireland opted out of the Free State.
Special Powers Act was introduced in Northern Ireland.

1923
May    The Irish Civil War ended.

1931    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) was declared illegal in the Irish Free State.  Ulster Protestant League (UPL) established.

1932    Northern Ireland Government moved to new buildings at Stormont.

1936    Public Order Act introduced in Northern Ireland.  This gave the Chief Constable the power to impose conditions on parades or public processions if it was thought they would lead to public disorder.

1937    The Irish Constitution was approved by a referendum.  The Constitution claimed sovereignty over the whole of the island of Ireland.

1939 - 1945    World War II.  The Irish Republican Army (IRA) began a campaign of bombing in Britain.

1949    Republic of Ireland established.  Republic of Ireland leaves the Commonwealth.  Ireland Act (1949) guaranteed Northern Ireland's position within the United Kingdom.

1954    A second coalition government took power in the Republic of Ireland.  Flags and Emblems Act introduced in Northern Ireland.  The Act was exclusively used against the flying of the 'tricolour' (the flag of the Republic of Ireland).

1956 - 1962    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) began what was called its 'border campaign'.  As a result of the campaign, Internment was introduced in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.  The campaign ended in March 1962 because of lack of support.

1963    John F. Kennedy, President of the United States of America, visited the Republic of Ireland.

1964  Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ) formed.  The CSJ was the forerunner of the civil rights movement and it began a program of publicizing what it saw as widespread discrimination, in a number of areas of life, against Catholics in Northern Ireland. Rioting in Belfast during the election.

1965    Sean Lemass, Irish Prime Minister, traveled to Belfast to meet Terence O'Neill, Northern Ireland Prime Minister.  This was the first official meeting between an Irish Taoiseach and a Northern Ireland Prime Minister.  A meeting between the two men also took place in Dublin. The meetings caused uproar amongst unionists.

1966    Rioting broke out in Belfast as Loyalists held counter demonstrations to oppose commemorations of the Easter Rising in 1916.  Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) formed.

1967
1 February    The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) was formed.  The Civil Rights Movement called for a number of reforms one of which was for 'one man, one vote' for local government elections.  Other reforms pressed for included:  the end to perceived discrimination in the allocation of public sector housing and appointments to, particularly, public sector employment; the repeal of the Special Powers Act; and the disbandment of the 'B-Specials' (Ulster Special Constabulary) which was a paramilitary style reserve police force which was entirely Protestant in its makeup.
November    The Derry Housing Action Committee (DHAC) was formed.  Republican Clubs were declared illegal in Northern Ireland.

1968
24 August    First Civil Rights March.  The Campaign for Social Justice (CSJ), the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA), and a number of other groups, held the first 'civil rights march' in Northern Ireland from Coalisland to Dungannon.  Loyalists organized a counter demonstration in an effort to get the march banned (a tactic that was to be used throughout the period of 'the Troubles') and in fact the planned rally was banned.  Despite this, the march occurred without incident. The publicity surrounding the march acted as encouragement to other protesting groups to form branches of the NICRA.
5 October    Civil Rights March in Derry.  Considered by many as the start date of the current 'Troubles'.  Estimates of the number of people taking part in the march differ.  One of the organizers of the march estimated that about 400 people lined up on the street with a further 200 watching from the pavements.  The RUC broke-up the march by baton-charging the crowd and leaving many people injured including a number of MPs.  The incidents were filmed and there was world-wide television coverage.  The incidents in Derry had a profound effect on many people around the world but particularly on the Catholic population of Northern Ireland.  Immediately after the march there were two days of serious rioting in Derry between the Catholic residents of the city and the RUC. 

1969
1 January    March organized by the People's Democracy.  The intention was to walk from Belfast to Derry, although much of the route was through Protestant countryside, and they were forced to take various detours.  At Burntollet Bridge, on the Derry to Claudy road, an ambush was waiting for them and stones and bottles were hurled down on them by Loyalists who were positioned on high ground over-looking the road.  When they tried to escape into the fields, police forced them back onto the main road, where they were viciously attacked by men armed with crowbars, sticks and various other weapons.  The police did very little to protect them.  Those who were fit to continue to Derry did so, but were attacked again along the road. Later that evening, after their arrival in Derry, 20 police constables went on the rampage in the Bogside, smashing down doors and windows.  Barricades were erected around Catholic areas of Derry and rioting lasted for several days.  The television coverage of this episode reflected very badly on the police.
12 August
    Battle of the Bogside.  The Apprentice Boys held their annual parade and as they paraded past the Bogside (a working-class Catholic part of Derry) they jeered and threw pennies at Catholics.  Catholics responded with stones.  Loyalist supporters and the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) then became involved.  By 7:15 p.m., a full scale riot was in progress, later referred to as the 'Battle of the Bogside'.  Once news spread to other parts of Northern Ireland, rioting erupted in many Catholic areas across the North, most notably Belfast.  This continued on a wide scale until 2 days later (14 August).  Chichester Clark, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, called for the mobilization of British troops on the streets of Northern Ireland.

1971
25 February    The Housing Executive (Northern Ireland) Act became law.  The Act provided for the establishment for a central authority for public sector housing in Northern Ireland and to also oversee the provision of grants for improvement to the private sector. 
23 March    The Local Government Boundaries (Northern Ireland) Act became law.  The Act provided for the appointment of a Boundaries Commissioner to recommend the boundaries and names of district council and ward areas. 

1974    Formation of the Junior Orange Institution.  As the name suggests, this is a branch of the Orange Order which only accepts boys under the age of 16. 

1975
5 May    The Fair Employment (NI) Bill was introduced to the House of Lords.  [The resulting Fair Employment Act went into effect on 1 December 1976.] 

1985
3 July    The 'Tunnel', that is, the Catholic Obins Street area of Portadown, became a subject of controversy.  Thousands of Loyalists demonstrated against a proposed Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) decision to re-route a church parade away from the 'Tunnel' area.  
6 July    The RUC gave the go-ahead for a church parade to go through the disputed area, but it imposed a ban on similar marches on the 12th and 13th July.  The result of this decision was to cause serious clashes in Portadown between Nationalist protesters and the Police on 7 July as the Parade, consisting of 2,500 Orangeman, passed through the Catholic Obins Street.  Eight policemen were injured and three people were arrested during these clashes.
12 - 13 July    There was further rioting in Portadown, this time between Loyalists and the RUC, as the Orange order and Black Institution Parades were re-routed from the controversial 'Tunnel' area.  Police had sealed off all the entrances to Obins Street, and Loyalist protesters hurled stones and bottles at them.  Police responded with plastic bullets.  In total 52 policemen were injured and 43 people were arrested during these two days of rioting. 

1986
3 July    The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) allowed an Orange Church parade to pass through the Catholic Obins Street area of Portadown, but banned the 12th and 13th July Parades from doing so.  Three days later rioting broke out when police prevented George Seawright, a Loyalist politician, from passing through the 'Tunnel' area. 
11th July    The Portadown Orangemen accepted the compromise offered to them by the RUC, that is, that they could march along the Garvaghy Road route; a compromise which was to result in a weekend of violence.  The weekend casualties included 128 police injuries, 66 civilian injuries and 127 arrests.  The riots continued in Belfast and Portadown for six consecutive nights. 

1987
8 November    During the annual Remembrance Day ceremony in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, a bomb planted by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded at the War Memorial killing 11 people and injuring another 63.

1988
11 January    John Hume, leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), met with Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF).  This was the first in a series of discussions between the two men.

1989
5 March    Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF), made a speech in which he said that he sought a "non-armed political movement to work for self-determination" in Ireland.

1990
9 November    Peter Brooke, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, made a major speech on the British position to an audience in London.  In the speech he said that Britain had no "strategic or economic interest" in Northern Ireland and would accept unification of Ireland if that was the wish of the people of Northern Ireland.

1991
14 March    Peter Brooke, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, announced to the House of Commons that talks involving the four main parties in Northern Ireland would take place during a gap in the operation of the Anglo-Irish Conference meetings.  These talks were the first of a series lasting from March 1991 to November 1992 which became known as the Brooke / Mayhew Talks.

1992
1 July    In a significant shift in approach, the Unionist parties agreed to talks with politicians from the Republic of Ireland under the Brooke / Mayhew Talks.

1993
11 April    The secret talks held between John Hume, leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), and Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF), became public knowledge when the Sunday Tribune newspaper ran a story.  The talks were criticized by a number of parties and individuals.
23 October     Ten people were killed when a bomb being planted by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded prematurely in a shop on the Shankill Road, Belfast.  With the exception of one of the bombers who was also killed, the rest of those who died were Protestant civilians.  The bombing represented the greatest loss of life in Northern Ireland in a single incident since the Enniskillen bombing on 8 November 1987. There was a wave of condemnations of the attack. Loyalist paramilitaries reacted immediately shooting two Catholic men one of whom died later from his wounds.

1994
29 January    Bill Clinton, President of the United States of America, ordered that Gerry Adams, then President of Sinn Féin (SF), should be given a visa to enter the USA to address a peace conference.
6 April -  8 April    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) called a three-day ceasefire.
18 June    The Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) killed six Catholic men in a gun attack on a bar in Loughlinisland, County Down.  The attack was widely condemned.
10 November    Frank Kerr (54), a Post Office worker in a sorting office, was shot dead during a robbery.  [The Irish Republican Army (IRA) later admitted that some of its members had been responsible though it claimed the killing had not been sanctioned by the Army Council of the IRA.]

1995
22 February    John Major, British Prime Minister, and John Bruton, Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), held a press conference in Belfast to launch the Framework Document.
9 July    The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) blocked an Orange parade from returning from Drumcree Church to Portadown along the Garvaghy Road, a Catholic area.  The decision sparked a stand-off between the RUC and the Orange Order.  There were disturbances and blocked roads across Northern Ireland as protests were organized by loyalists in support of the Orange Order.
11 July    A compromise was reached which allowed the Drumcree parade to proceed down the Garvaghy Road in Portadown.
27 July    Patrick Mayhew, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, and Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF), met for their first official talks at Stormont.
8 September    David Trimble was elected as leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP).

1996
9 February    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a large bomb at South Quay in the Docklands area of London, England.  The lorry bomb kills two people, injuries many more, causes millions of pounds worth of damage, and marks the end of the IRA ceasefire. 
3 March    Launch of intensive consultations between the Northern Ireland political parties.
7 July    The Royal Ulster Constabularly (RUC) prevented a march by Portadown Orangemen from returning from Drumcree Church via the Garvaghy Road.  Protests and roadblocks by Loyalists began to spread across Northern Ireland.
13 July    A car bomb exploded outside the Kilyhelvin Hotel, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, causing substantial damage.  The Irish Republican Army (IRA) denied responsibility for the bomb as did Republican Sinn Féin (RSF).  [The bomb was later believed to be the work of a new group called the Continuity Irish Republican Army (CIRA).]
7 October    The Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded two bombs in the British Army Headquarters, Thiepval Barracks, Lisburn, County Antrim.  The bombs were the first attack against the security forces in Northern Ireland by the IRA since their ceasefire on 31 August 1994.

1997
1 May    The Labour Party was elected to power in British General Election.  Tony Blair, leader of the Labour Party became Prime Minister.  Marjorie (Mo) Molam, was appointed as Secretary of State of Northern Ireland in the new Labour government.  Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF), was elected for West Belfast and Martin McGuinness, the Vice-President of Sinn Féin (SF), was elected to Mid-Ulster.
6 July    There was violence in Portadown, which later spread to other Nationalist areas, after the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) moved in the early hours to seal off the Garvaghy Road to allow the Orange march through the Catholic area.
20 July    Following an approach from Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Féin (SF), and other SF members, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) declared a renewal of its ceasefire.
26 August    An International body was established to oversee the decommissioning of paramilitary weapons.
17 September    The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) joined the multi-party talks at Stromont.  The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) boycotted the talks because of the presence of SF, as did the United Kingdom Unionist Party (UKUP).

1998
9 February    Marjorie (Mo) Mowlam, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, went into the Maze Prison to meet Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) prisoners in an attempt to change their decision to end their support for the peace process.  This strategy worked and the prisoners subsequently restated their support for the peace process.
6 April    George Mitchell, independent chairman of the multi-party talks, gave each of the parties his version of a possible draft agreement based on the talks to that date.
10 April    'Good Friday'.  All the parties talking place in the multi-party talks at Stormont sign an agreement.  The talks are brought to an end by George Mitchell, the independent chairman.
16 April    An opinion poll indicated that 73% of people in Northern Ireland were in favor of the Good Friday Agreement.
22 May    Referendum on The Agreement.  There was a huge turnout throughout the island of Ireland as people in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland voted on the Good Friday Agreement.  This was the first all-Ireland poll since the general election of 1918.  It was clear from the number of people going to polling stations across Northern Ireland that there had been a high turnout (the figure was 81.10%). [When all the votes were counted the results were as follows: Northern Ireland - Yes 71.12%, No 28.88% (turnout 81.10%); Republic of Ireland - Yes 94.39%, No 5.61% (turnout 56.26%); Ireland overall - Yes 85.46%, No 14.54%, (turnout 53.70%).
27 May    In the aftermath of the Good Friday Agreement the issue of the 'decommissioning' of paramilitary weapons began to dominate the political agenda.  [Decommissioning was to prove a stumbling block to the full implementation of the Agreement and the issue was still causing problems in November 1999.]
25 June    Northern Ireland Assembly Election.  An election was held across Northern Ireland to chose representatives for the new Northern Ireland Assembly.  The election was contested in the 18 parliamentary constituencies with six people being returned from each of the constituencies making a total of 108 members for the new Assembly.
5 July    Drumcree Parade - 'Drumcree IV'  For the fourth year in a row the Drumcree parade by the Portadown District Lodge of the Orange Order proved to be the focal point for divisions in Northern Ireland.  The parade passed from the center of Portadown, County Armagh, along the edge of a Nationalist area to the Church of Ireland parish church at Drumcree where the Orangemen attended a service.  However, as the Orangemen attempted to walk back to the center of Portadown, along the mainly Catholic Garvaghy Road, the route was blocked by the police and the British Army.  A stand-off began.  The decision to reroute the parade had been taken by the Parades Commission.  As the day wore on, the number of Orangemen protesting at Drumcree increased.  The British government said that it would "hold the line" against those protesting at Drumcree.  Throughout the day there were street protests across Northern Ireland by Loyalists in support of the Orange Order.  A number of roads were blocked and some cars set on fire. A number of Catholic homes were also attacked in Belfast.
12 July    Three Boys Killed at Ballymoney.   Three young Catholic boys, Richard (11), Mark (10), and Jason (9) Quinn, were killed after their home, in Ballymoney, County Antrim, was petrol bombed in a sectarian attack carried out by Loyalists.  William Bingham (Rev.), Deputy Grand Chaplain of the Orange Order, called for the Drumcree protest to be ended and said that the 15 minute march down the Garvaghy Road would be "a hallow victory" as it would be taking place in the shadows of three little white coffins.  David Trimble, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), and Robin Eames (Dr), Church of Ireland Primate, also called for an end to the protest.  The Orange Order rejected these and other similar calls.  [The protest at Drumcree declined following the Quinn deaths but a token protest was maintained during the whole of the year to July 1999.]
1 August    Thirty-three civilians and two members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) were injured when a car bomb (estimated at 500 pounds) exploded in Banbridge, County Down.  Extensive damage was also caused in the explosion that was later claimed by the "real" Irish Republican Army (rIRA).
15 August    The Omagh Bomb.  Twenty-nine people died as a result of an explosion at 3:10 pm in Omagh, County Tyrone.  The bomb had been planted by the "real" Irish Republican Army (rIRA).  The death toll represented the single worst incident within Northern Ireland since the beginning of the conflict.  Among the dead were family members, one family lost members from three generations, and close friends, and a number of tourists from the Republic of Ireland and Spain.  One woman who died was pregnant with twins.  There were hundreds of people injured, some of whom lost limbs or their sight.  [The code word used was that of the rIRA, a breakaway group of dissident members from the Provisional IRA who disagreed with the political direction being taken by the Sinn Féin leadership.  There was outrage and shock across the whole population of Northern Ireland.  Many people expressed the hope that this incident would mark a turning point in the conflict.]
26 August    Blair Visits Omagh.  Tony Blair, British Prime Minister, paid a visit to the site of the bomb in Omagh, County Tyrone.  Blair promised draconian legislation to deal with any paramilitary groups that refused to call a ceasefire.  Sinn Féin (SF) said the new measures would amount to "internment in another guise".
3 September    Clinton Visit to Northern Ireland.  Bill Clinton, President of the United States of America, paid his second visit to Northern Ireland.  Clinton delivered his address at the Waterfront Hall in Belfast.
11 September    First Paramilitary Prisoners Released Under Agreement.  The first of the paramilitary prisoners were released from jails in Northern Ireland under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.  Seven prisoners, including three Republican and three Loyalist, were released in a program that was expected to take two years to complete.
14 September    Meeting of Northern Ireland Assembly.  The Northern Ireland Assembly met for the first time since June 1998.  David Trimble, First Minister designate, said that the issue of decommissioning remained an obstacle to the establishment of the Northern Ireland Assembly. 
17 October    It was announced that the Nobel Prize for Peace would be awarded jointly to John Hume, leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), and David Trimble, leader of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP).

1999
18 March    Bertie Ahern, Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), Tony Blair, British Prime Minister, and Bill Clinton, President of the United States of America (USA), issued a tripartite statement.  They urged the leaders of political parties in Northern Ireland to meet the deadline set for all aspects of the Good Friday Agreement.
4 July    Drumcree Parade - 'Drumcree V'  For the fifth year in a row attention was focused on the Orange Order parade at Drumcree, Portadown, County Armagh. The Orange Order was refused permission to parade down the mainly Catholic Garvaghy Road.  The security forces had erected a steel barricade across the road to halt the march but the subsequent protest passed off relatively quietly compared to previous years.
17 July    It was announced that the former Northern Ireland talks chairman, Senator George Mitchell, had been invited to take part in a summit meeting on the peace process between the Taoiseach and the British Prime Minister.
14 August    There was violence in Derry and Belfast following Apprentice Boys parades through the Bogside and lower Ormeau Road.
6 September    Start of Review of Good Friday Agreement.  George Mitchell, former Chairman of the multi-party talks, was in Castle Buildings to open the review of the Good Friday Agreement.  He made clear that the review would concentrate specifically on breaking the deadlock over decommissioning and the formation of an executive.
30 November    The House of Lords and the House of Commons both approved a devolution order under the Northern Ireland Act 1998 that allowed for the transfer of power from Westminster to the Assembly at Stormont.  [This allowed for the ending the system of 'Direct Rule' that had been installed in 1972.]
2 December    New Devolved Government Direct Rule came to an end as powers were devolved to the Northern Ireland Assembly.  [Devolution took effect as of midnight on 1 December 1999.]  At a meeting in Dublin at 9:00 a.m., the North-South Ministerial Council and the British-Irish Ministerial Council, as set out in the Good Friday Agreement, took effect.  At the same time, the Anglo-Irish Agreement was replaced by the British-Irish Agreement.  At 9:20 a.m., Articles 2 and 3 of the Irish Constitution were replaced by new Articles.  At 3:00 p.m., the new Executive of the Northern Ireland Assembly met for the first time.  Present at the meeting were representatives of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), and Sinn Féin (SF).  The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) refused to attend.  At 8:30 p.m., the IRA issued a statement indicating that it would appoint a representative to meet the Decommissioning Body chaired by General de Chastelain. 

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