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Word: belfast (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...residents of divis Tower celebrated this summer when the British army closed the observation post that had taken up the top two floors of their drab apartment block in West Belfast for more than 30 years. Not Joe Lavelle. As his guided tour passed on the road below, soldiers used to wave on cue when passengers pointed their cameras from the open top of their double-decker bus. Now, as a mark of the peace that's slowly settled over Northern Ireland, the troopers and their fortified outpost are gone. "It's like going to Paris and not having...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Tragedy Into a Tourist Industry | 10/4/2005 | See Source »

When the Irish Republican Army first faced demands to give up its arms and explosives almost a decade ago, an anonymous graffiti writer summed up its response on a Belfast wall: "Not a bullet, not an ounce...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IRA Satisfies Disarmament Panel | 9/27/2005 | See Source »

...Today, the same slogan might be more appropriate as an inventory of the IRA's arsenal - at least, according to the international panel appointed to oversee IRA disarmament. On Monday in Belfast, retired Canadian General John de Chastelain finally delivered the report he'd been waiting eight years to make: his international panel had spent the previous week observing the IRA decommission a vast array of weaponry, everything from a World War II-vintage machine gun to surface-to-air missiles. Using British and Irish intelligence reports on IRA arms as a guide, the general concluded that he had witnessed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IRA Satisfies Disarmament Panel | 9/27/2005 | See Source »

...General De Chastelain's announcement ought to mean the removal of a huge obstacle to a lasting settlement in Northern Ireland. But unionists aren't sure whether to believe him. Under their own slogan - "No guns, no government" - they have pulled out of successive power-sharing governments in Belfast on the grounds that the IRA's guns would always be an unspoken threat to democracy. The comparatively moderate Ulster Unionist Party, long dominant in Protestant politics, was pushed into a humiliating second place in elections last year by Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionists, who have focused...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IRA Satisfies Disarmament Panel | 9/27/2005 | See Source »

...rioting cast a pall over the British and Irish governments' hopes of using momentum generated by the IRA's disarmament declaration to restore a stable local government in early 2006. Mitchell Reiss, a U.S. State Department envoy, came to Belfast this week to help pave the way for a new round of talks, and ended up criticizing Unionist leaders who blamed anyone but the rioters for the unrest. The talks will probably take place anyway, but they may not be enough to revive Protestant interest in the settlement. And so, having spent more than five years bringing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Belfast's Streets Burn Again | 9/13/2005 | See Source »

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