2002 in Northern Ireland
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Incumbents
Events
- 9 January - Holy Cross dispute: Confrontations outside Holy Cross Primary School, a Roman Catholic girls' school in the largely Protestant Ardoyne district, during the afternoon school run, explode into widespread sectarian rioting which spreads across north Belfast and continues on 10 January, when the school is closed.
- February - West Belfast Task Force recommends creation of the Gaeltacht Quarter, Belfast.[1]
- 14 February - Kilkeel fishing boat The Tullaghmurray Lass is lost with all three crew in the Irish Sea.
- 14 March - Lisburn and Newry are granted city status.[2]
- 5 April - The first recruits of the new Police Service of Northern Ireland graduate.
- 4 October - "Stormontgate": Denis Donaldson, Sinn Féin’s Northern Ireland Assembly group administrator, and two others are arrested for intelligence-gathering.
- 14 October - As of midnight the Northern Ireland Assembly and the Executive are suspended by order of the Secretary of State.
- Work is completed on the renovation of the Albert Memorial Clock, Belfast.
Arts and literature
- David Park's novel The Big Snow is published.
- Richard Dormer's one-man play Hurricane (based on the life of snooker player Alex Higgins) opens at the Old Museum Arts Centre, Belfast.
Sport
Football
- Winners: Portadown
- Winners: Derry City 1 - 0 Shamrock Rovers
Gaelic Athletic Association
Golf
- Senior British Open Championship held at Royal County Down Golf Club, (winner: Noboru Sugai).
- Graeme McDowell turns professional and wins that season's Volvo Scandinavian Masters.
Ice Hockey
- Belfast Giants won the Ice Hockey Superleague championship.
Deaths
- 8 January - David McWilliams, singer, songwriter, and guitarist (born 1945).
- 17 May - James Chichester-Clark, Fifth Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (born 1923).
- 28 August - Jim McFadden, ice hockey player (born 1920).
- 3 October - John Erritt, Deputy Director of the British Government Statistical Service (born 1931).
- 17 October - Derek Bell, harpist and composer (born 1935).
- David Beers Quinn, historian (born 1909).
References
- ↑ West Belfast Task Force Report (PDF), West Belfast Task Force, February 2002, retrieved 2012-08-21
- ↑ "Two NI towns awarded city status". BBC News. 2002-03-14. Retrieved 2013-03-14.
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