1997 in Northern Ireland
Events during the year 1997 in Northern Ireland.
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Incumbents
    
- Secretary of State - Patrick Mayhew (until 3 May), Mo Mowlam (from 3 May)
 
Events
    
- March - The first phase of the Forestside Shopping Centre in Belfast opens with a new Sainsbury's store.
 - 1 May - 1997 United Kingdom general election.
 - 3 July - Taoiseach Bertie Ahern meets Prime Minister Tony Blair for the first time.
 - 6–11 July - 1997 nationalist riots in Northern Ireland: There is violence in nationalist areas after an Orange Order parade is allowed down the Garvaghy Road by the Royal Ulster Constabulary in Portadown as part of the Drumcree conflict.
 - 20 July - The Provisional Irish Republican Army institutes a second ceasefire.
 - 7 October - Substantial all-party talks begin in Northern Ireland.
 - 10 October - At a Provisional IRA General Army Convention held at Falcarragh, County Donegal, a majority supports the ceasefire.[1][2]
 - 26 October - Provisional IRA Executive members opposed to the ceasefire including Michael McKevitt and Bernadette Sands McKevitt resign.[3]
 - November - Dissident IRA members led by Michael McKevitt meet at a farmhouse in Oldcastle, County Meath, and form a new organisation of Óglaigh na hÉireann, which becomes known as the Real Irish Republican Army.[3]
 - 27 December - Loyalist Volunteer Force leader Billy Wright is shot dead in the Maze prison by members of the Irish National Liberation Army.[4]
 
Arts and literature
    
- 26 August - U2 play their first Belfast concert in over a decade as part of the PopMart Tour. 40,000 fans attend the concert in Belfast Botanic Gardens.
 - Ciarán Carson's The Star Factory is published and wins The Yorkshire Post Book Award (Book of the Year).
 - Seamus Deane's first novel, Reading in the Dark (published in 1996), is shortlisted for the Booker Prize and wins The Irish Times International Fiction Prize and The Irish Literature Prize.
 - Waterfront Hall concert and conference venue in Belfast is completed.
 
Sport
    
    Football
    
- Winners: Crusaders
 
- Winners: Glenavon 1 - 0 Cliftonville
 
- Winners: Derry City
 
- Winners: Shelbourne 2 - 0 Derry City
 
Births
    
- SOAK, born Bridie Monds-Watson, singer-songwriter.
 
Deaths
    
- 7 January - Patricia McLaughlin, Ulster Unionist Party MP (b.1916).
 - 7 March - Geraldine Clinton Little, poet (b.1923).
 - 17 April - Chaim Herzog, sixth President of Israel (1983–1993) (b.1918).
 - 2 May - Robin Kinahan, Unionist politician and businessman (b.1916).
 - 22 July - Vincent Hanna, television journalist (b.1939).
 - 22 August - Brendan Smyth, Roman Catholic priest and convicted child sexual abuser (b.1927).
 - 4 October - Sheila McGibbon, actress (b.1921).
 - 27 December - Billy Wright, leader of the Loyalist Volunteer Force (b.1960; k. in prison).
 - 29 December - John Graham, Irish Republican Army activist in 1940s (b.1915).
 - Kennedy Lindsay - Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party politician and British Ulster Dominion Party leader (b.1924 in Canada).
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Harnden, Toby (1999). Bandit Country. London: Hodder & Stoughton. pp. 429–431. ISBN 0-340-71736-X.
 - English, Richard (2003). Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA. London: Pan Books. p. 296. ISBN 0-330-49388-4.
 - Mooney, John; O'Toole, Michael (2004). Black Operations: The Secret War Against the Real IRA. Ashbourne, Co. Meath: Maverick House. pp. 33–39. ISBN 0-9542945-9-9.
 - "Loyalist leader murdered in prison". BBC On This Day. 27 December 1997. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
 
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