The Glasdrumman ambush was an attack by the South Armagh Brigade of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) against a British Army observation post in Glasdrumman, County Armagh on 17 July 1981.
Routledge, →ISBN, page 1091. Toby Harnden, Bandit Country: The IRA & South Armagh, →ISBN jri From Arabic جَرْي (jary). Doublet of jirk. jark m verbal noun ...
Plans for a new £1.5 million mixed use development – including a restaurant, takeaway, four shops and three industrial units –... Young people in the south Armagh area are being supported to improve ...
The British Army’s Observation masts in Camlough in South Armagh were scrapped in response to the IRA move on the decommissioning of weapons. The watchtower was in place for a decade.
By then he was an undercover intelligence operative tasked with collecting intelligence on the IRA in the lawless “bandit ...
Hurling is not followed as widely as football is, however, in south Armagh, some clubs remain, with Middletown and Keady producing most of the county’s senior panel of recent years. Ulster Club ...
He was last seen alive on May 14 1977 when republicans abducted him from the Three Steps Inn near Dromintee in south Armagh ... and secretly buried by the IRA in 1977. But we have been told ...
Intruders armed with a machete and hammer smashed living room door panels in a bid to get at a man protecting his family at their home in south Armagh, the High Court heard today. Prosecutors ...