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It doesn t diminish : The legacy of the 1981 hunger strikes, 40 years on
This Monday will mark 40 years since Bobby Sands went on hunger strike. By Sean Murray Saturday 27 Feb 2021, 12:05 AM Feb 27th 2021, 12:05 AM 31,842 Views 40 Comments
ON PAGE 9 of The Irish Times of Friday 27 February 1981, a headline read: “H-Block fast generates little pressure.”
The report outlined how a “low-key atmosphere prevail[ed]” in the run-up to the latest hunger strike. It said the IRA leader in the H-Blocks would be starting the strike alone before being joined at regular intervals by other prisoners.
The article ended: “In the face of an unmoved British government, the straight demand for ‘political status’ is seen by some as ‘unreal’.”
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1/1 TWINS who died less than an hour after birth died as a result of prematurity - indirectly caused by a medical intervention procedure which was performed to try and save them, an inquest concluded. A six-hour inquest heard how Faith Summer Peacock and Reggie Robert Peacock died 53 minutes after being born on August 1, 2019 at Dorset County Hospital. The twins died of prematurity which senior coroner for Dorset Rachael Griffin said was an indirect result of multifetal reduction surgery . On May 13, Rebecca Peacock, 26, of Lyme Regis, found out she was pregnant with quintuplets after natural contraception, an extremely rare occurrence. Mrs Peacock and husband Peter, 35, were referred by DCH fetal consultant Dr Robert Sandy to have surgery at St George s Hospital, London, on June 5, 2019.
print kicker: Sangamon Link
A drunken shootout in a Springfield saloon in 1905 left three men dead and two brothers charged with murder.
The cause was a previous fistfight, followed by a series of telephoned challenges.
Those killed were all from the Berlin area: horse trader Samuel Douglas, farmer John Lawrence, and Charles Casson, a farmhand. James and William Hinman, livestock dealers from Springfield, were found not guilty of killing Casson, after which charges were dropped in connection with the other two deaths.
The dead men were among eight to 10 Berlin men who came to Springfield to confront the Hinmans over the fistfight.