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Coronavirus: Lockdown made me feel like I was in prison
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John Nicholl is registered deafblind.
The County Antrim man was born deaf and was later diagnosed with Ushers syndrome, a condition that has left him with very little sight.
He communicates through hands-on sign language and as a result was left extremely isolated during periods of lockdown in Northern Ireland.
There are around 400,000 people who are deafblind in the UK with 11,000 registered in Northern Ireland.
Deafblind UK say it is handling three times more wellbeing calls than it did before the pandemic.
Video journalist: Niall McCracken
Rather than identifying as victims, the women become vigilantes, taking matters of right and wrong into their own hands with the support of Ivy, who has a Machiavellian way of covering her tracks and manipulating the justice system.
When Sally’s abusive boyfriend is released from prison and attempts to confront her at the refuge, she is taken under Ivy’s wing and introduced to the unique way the women at the refuge move on from their pasts.
From broken and bruised to cunning killers, the women will stop at nothing to ensure that toxic and violent men no longer roam the streets.