First Minister Michelle O’Neill has backed the Irish president’s decision to highlight the conflict in Gaza during a Holocaust memorial event. But Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly ...
LONDON (AP) — Ireland was hit with wind gusts of 114 miles (183 kilometers) an hour, the strongest on record, as a winter storm battered the country and northern parts of the U.K. on Friday, leaving hundreds of thousands of people without power.
Ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day on Monday, Michelle O’Neill and Emma Little-Pengelly attended an event in Belfast to remember millions of victims and survivors. The event at Belfast City Hall ...
First Minister Michelle O'Neill has said there are "lessons to be learned for everybody" following a Stormont report examining the employment of a former Sinn Féin press officer who was later ...
The First Minister and Deputy First Minister have said they will work with the newly inaugurated US President Donald Trump “for the benefit of Northern Ireland”, as Michelle O’Neill says she ...
First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly highlighted that compensation payments were available in Scotland for affected customers. Some 65,000 homes and ...
First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly with Munira Subasic, president of Mothers of Srebrenica, at the Holocaust Memorial Day Regional Commemoration at ...
UK weather warnings as London faces more wind and rain - London faces more wind and rain as Storm Herminia continues to impact the UK
Fresh rain weather warnings for UK as thousands still without power and homes evacuated - Storm Herminia brings gusts of up to 83 miles per hour to the UK as the Met Office issues yellow weather warnings.
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Parts of Ireland and Northern Ireland are grappling with the devastating impact of Storm Eowyn, which hit early Friday with wind speeds exceeding 180 kilometers per hour (112 miles per hour). One person in Ireland died when a tree fell on his car,
Winds reached 100mph as Storm Eowyn left one person dead, more than a million people without power and caused significant travel disruption across the UK and Ireland. Rail services, flights and ferries have been cancelled across the country as rare red weather warnings are in place on Friday in Scotland.