Afleveringen
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The Belfast Telegraphâs political editor Suzanne Breen joins CiarĂĄn Dunbar with her analysis of Belfast Telegraphâs LucidTalk polling, including a recent dip in support for Michelle OâNeill among recent Sinn FĂ©in controversies and Unionist support for DUP ministersâ meetings with Loyalist paramilitary representatives.
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The Police Ombudsman says the PSNI investigation into the death of Katie Simpson was âflawed and failed her familyâ. The 21-year-old died in hospital a week after an incident where her sisterâs partner, Jonathan Creswell, claimed to have found her mid-suicide attempt. In reality, he had repeatedly attacked her. Police failed to question Katieâs death, despite Creswellâs violent history and physical signs of abuse on her body. He was later charged with her murder but took his life one day into the trial earlier this year. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by Allison Morris.
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In the making of a film ironically titled âA Landscape of Liesâ, Newry born actress Aoife Madden was joined by a wealthy Iraqi businessman to try their hand at making it on the big screen. But what appeared as a lifelong dream was really all about conning investors and the tax man out of millions. Madden (the niece of Sinn Fein Finance minister Conor Murphy) was part of a team which scammed HMRC ÂŁ2.8 million to produce a movie which she falsely promised to have a star-studded cast. Kurtis Reid joins CiarĂĄn Dunbar.
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Ex-Sinn FĂ©in press officer Michael McMonagle have been sentenced to nine months in custody for child sex offences. In one incident, he believed he was chatting online to a 12-year-old girl, who was actually a police decoy. The 42-year-old previously pleaded guilty to 14 charges. The case was one of a series of controversies which rocked Sinn FĂ©in in recent months.
Andrew Madden reports.
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The Enniskillen Bomb in November 1987 sent shockwaves across the world. An IRA bomb at a Remembrance Day service in the town killed 11 civilians, including three married couples. 63 people were injured, and a twelfth victim died after being in a coma for 13 years because of his injuries. No one has ever been convicted of the attack. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by former editor of the Impartial Reporter and author of âEnniskillen: The Remembrance Sunday Bombingâ Denzil McDaniel.
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Donald Trump has resoundingly won the US Presidency. He is now the oldest person to win the presidency, the only convicted felon to do so, and the only won to have incited an insurrection. But not of that matters now â the American people have spoken. How did the night play out, how surprised are we, and what does it mean for Northern Ireland and the Republic?
Keith Bailie, Brett Campbell, Margaret Canning and Olivia Peden join CiarĂĄn Dunbar.
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Loughinisland is a small parish in Co. Down. Its name has become synonymous with the infamous Loughinisland Massacre, when six were killed by the UVF in a pub while watching Ireland play Italy in the 1994 World Cup. Trevor Birney helped make a documentary about the murders â but in 2018, he was arrested by PSNI over material used in the film, alongside his colleague Barry Mccaffrey. Six years later, theyâre at the center of a major tribunal against the authorities over keeping surveillance of local Journalists. He joins CiarĂĄn Dunbar.
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Alf McCreary walked into the Belfast Telegraph on September 1, 1964 â and asked for a job. 60 years on, he's still writing for the paper. Alfâs career has given him many insights into our society and its divisions. He charted the evolution of the Rev Ian Paisley, and he wrote a biography of Gordon Wilson, whose daughter Marie was killed in the Enniskillen bombing.
He spoke to CiarĂĄn Dunbar about his life in journalism.
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The UVF began the 1970s with a campaign to cleans Catholics and Catholic owned businesses from Protestant dominated areas. With the IRAâs campaign at its height, the UVF moved from targeting nationalist and moderate political figures to simple sectarian murder â many of its victims just teenagers. By the mid-70s a notorious group emerged from the UVF which brought the savagery of the troubles to a new level â the Shankill Butchers. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by author and historian Aaron Edwards.
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Back in 1995, Fr Michael Kennedy took to the pulpit in Dungarvan, County Waterford to give his Sunday sermon. He warned locals that an âAngel of Deathâ was in their midst killing vulnerable men. What ensued sparked a global sensation.
Host: Dave Hanratty, Guest: Ellen Coyne
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Alexander McCartney, from Newry, is one of the most prolific paedophile âcatfishesâ the world has seen to date. A Judge said his crimes of âsadism and depravityâ were âon a par with murderâ. His actions led to the death of an innocent little girl, Cimarron Thomas, and subsequently, her father. Kurtis Reid was in court.
Just a note to say â some listeners might find the contents of the episode of the BelTel disturbing.
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The word âIncelâ is short for âinvoluntarily celibateâ. Theyâre primarily men, who believe theyâre doomed to be alone, blaming society, women, and sometimes themselves for their isolation. The explosion of the âIncelâ community online has led to multiple forums, chats and groups based on their beliefs, which have led to disastrous consequences. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by the Belfast Telegraphâs Kurtis Reid and Olivia Peden, who went undercover on one of these forums.
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The Kinahan cartel is Irelandâs most powerful crime gang, and one half of its most notorious gang war. After a failed hit on boss Daniel Kinahan, the cartel recruited a team of killers to retaliate against the Hutch gang. One of the men they hired was Estonian Imre âThe Butcherâ Arakas â but the eccentric hitman was soon caught.
CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by crime editor with the Irish Sun and co-author of âKinahan Assassinsâ, Stephen Breen, to tell the story of the Kinahan-Hutch feud, its victims and its hitmen.
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Sinn FĂ©in controversies snowball as party member resigns after a portrait is damaged in Belfast City. Is the party suffering from a media pile-on before an election or a self-inflicted meltdown caused by a lack of professionalism? All this just before an election â one which might feature well-known crime figure Gerry âthe Monkâ Hutch.
CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by Dublin based news reporter GrĂĄinne NĂ Aodha and commentator and politics lecturer David McCann to talk politics.
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Samuel âUelâ Cooke was a prolific UVF hitman. Connected to at least six murders, including the killing of IRA Chief Brendan âRubyâ Davison, his most heinous deed was the murder of innocent 26-year-old Catholic Anne-Marie Smyth. She had been attending a concert in east Belfast before being lured to a nearby house, where she was brutally beaten and killed by a UVF-led gang. Cooke died this month, aged 59. Sunday Lifeâs Ciaran Barnes joins CiarĂĄn Dunbar.
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On 24th March 1922, five men dressed in RIC police uniforms broke into the north Belfast home of well-known Catholic publican Owen McMahon. The men shoot and kill McMahon, along with four of his sons, and an employee of the family. What happened next changed the course of history on the Island of Ireland. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by historian and author Dr Edward Burke to explain why the murders changed so much.
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Mary Lou McDonald has been accused of orchestrating an âelaborate cover-upâ after admitting didnât divulge why former Sinn FĂ©in senator Niall Ă Donnghaile resigned from the Seanad. The former Belfast Lord Mayor has now admitted he had resigned over inappropriate texts to a teen. What will all of this mean for the Republicâs looming election?
CiarĂĄn Dunbar joined by the Irish Independentâs political editor â Philip Ryan.
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In the past six weeks, four women have been killed in NI, bringing this yearâs total of alleged femicides up to six. At the time of recording, a further two deaths from this weekend are under investigation. Why is femicide so high in Northern Ireland, how does the PSNI deal with domestic violence here, and can anything be done? CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by Allison Morris.
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On the 13 October 1994, six weeks after the IRA announced a âcomplete cessationâ, the Loyalist paramilitary groups declared their ceasefires. The UVFâs Gusty Spence announced loyalist violence was over, in a step that is seen as one of the vital steps towards a lasting peace in Northern Ireland. CiarĂĄn Dunbar is joined by former PUP leader Billy Hutchinson, Historian Aaron Edwards, and journalists Allison Morris, Mark Simpson, and Vincent Kearney.
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22 people died in the 2017 Manchester Bombing, and over a thousand were injured. Former TV producer Richard Hall has been in court for allegedly harassing victims of the bombing to show that the event was an âelaborate hoaxâ. He believes that the bombing was staged, and the people involved were âcrisis actorsâ. What are they, and why do so many people believe in them?
Olivia Peden is joined by Belfast Telegraph journalist Kurtis Reid to find out why conspiracy theorists deny events like these.
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