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  CAIN Web Service 'Bloody Sunday', 30 January 1972 - A Chronology of Events
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 Page Compiled: Martin Melaugh and Fionnuala Mckenna
 Material is added to this site on a regular basis - information on this page may change
 
 
  
  
  This is a draft (v2) of some of the main events which took place
  in the lead up to, and in the wake of, 'Bloody Sunday', 30 January
  1972. This list has been compiled from a number of sources.
  
 Saturday 5 October 1968 (Start date of the current 'Troubles')
  
  A civil rights march in Derry,
  which had been organised by members of the Derry Housing Action
  Committee (DHAC) and supported by the Northern Ireland Civil Rights
  Association (NICRA), was stopped by the Royal Ulster Constabulary
  (RUC) before it had properly begun. The marchers had proposed
  to walk from Duke Street in the Waterside area of Derry to the
  Diamond in the centre of the City. Present at the march were three
  British Labour Party Members of Parliament (MP), Gerry Fitt, then
  Republican Labour MP, several Stormont MPs, and members of the
  media including a television crew from RTE. Estimates of the number
  of people taking part in the march differ. Eamonn McCann (one
  of the organisers of the march) estimated that about 400 people
  lined up on the street with a further 200 watching from the pavements.
  The RUC broke-up the march by baton-charging the crowd and leaving
  many people injured including a number of MPs. The incidents were
  filmed and there was world-wide television coverage. The incidents
  in Derry had a profound effect on many people around the world
  but particularly on the Catholic population of Northern Ireland.
  Immediately after the march there were two days of serious rioting
  in Derry between the Catholic residents of the city and the RUC. Wednesday 1 January 1969
  Approximately 40 members of People's Democracy (PD) began
  a four-day march from Belfast across Northern Ireland to Derry.
  The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) and some
  nationalists in Derry had advised against the march. The march
  was modelled on Martin Luther King's Selma to Montgomery march.
  The first day involved a walk from Belfast to Antrim. [Over the
  next four days the number of people on the march grew to a few
  hundred. The march was confronted and attacked by Loyalist crowds
  on a number of occasions the most serious attack occurring on
  4 January 1969.] Saturday 4 January 1969
  The fourth, and final, day of the People's Democracy (PD)
  march took the marchers from Claudy to Derry. Seven miles from
  its destination, the People's Democracy (PD) march was ambushed
  and attacked by a loyalist mob at Burntollet Bridge. The ambush
  had been planned in advance and around 200 loyalists, including
  off-duty members of the 'B-Specials', used sticks, iron bars,
  bottles and stones to attack the marchers, 13 of whom received
  hospital treatment. The marchers believed that the 80 Royal Ulster
  Constabulary (RUC) officers, who accompanied the march, did little
  to protect them from the Loyalist crowd. As the march entered
  Derry it was again attached at Irish Street, a mainly Protestant
  area of the city. Finally the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC)
  broke up the rally that was held in the centre of the city as
  the march arrived. This action, and the subsequent entry of the
  RUC into the Bogside area of the city, led to serious rioting. Saturday 11 January 1969
  A Civil Rights march held in Newry ended in violence and there
  were also disturbances in Derry.  In Newry youths attacked the
  Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and overturned and burnt several
  of their vehicles. Friday 18 April 1969
  In a by-election to the Westminster parliament Bernadette
  Devlin, standing as a Unity candidate in Mid-Ulster, was elected
  and, at 21 years of age, became the youngest woman ever to be
  elected as Member of Parliament. Devlin was a prominent figure
  in the Civil Rights Movement and a leading member of People's
  Democracy. Friday 25 April 1969Following a bombing campaign by Loyalist extremists, 500 additional
  British troops are sent to Northern Ireland.
 Monday 28 April 1969
  As he was unable to regain the confidence of the Unionist
  party Terence O'Neill, then Northern Ireland Prime Minister, resigned
  to be replaced later by James Chichester-Clark. Tuesday 12 August 1969
  As the Apprentice Boys parade passed close to the Bogside
  area serious rioting erupted. The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC),
  using armoured cars and water cannons, entered the Bogside, in
  an attempt to end the rioting. The RUC were closely followed by
  a loyalist crowd. The residents of the Bogside forced the police
  and the loyalists back out of the area. The RUC used CS gas to
  again enter the Bogside area. [What was to become known as the
  'Battle of the Bogside' lasted for two days.] Wednesday 13 August 1969
  Serious rioting spread across Northern Ireland from Derry
  to other Catholic areas stretching the Royal Ulster Constabulary
  (RUC). The rioting deteriorated into sectarian conflict between
  Catholics and Protestants and many people, the majority being
  Catholics, were forced from their homes. 
  Jack Lynch, then Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), made a television
  address in which he announced that 'field hospitals' would be
  set up in border areas. He went on to say that: "... the
  present situation is the inevitable outcome of the policies pursued
  for decades by successive Stormont governments. It is clear also
  that the Irish government can no longer stand by and see innocent
  people injured and perhaps worse." Thursday 14 August 1969
  After two days of continuous battle, and with the Royal Ulster
  Constabulary (RUC) exhausted, the Stormont government asked the
  British government for permission to allow British troops to be
  deployed on the streets of Northern Ireland. Late in the afternoon
  troops entered the centre of Derry. [At this stage British Troops
  did not enter the area of the Bogside and the Creggan. There was
  a tacit understanding between the British Army and the Derry Citizens
  Defence Association (DCDA) that if the RUC and the army remained
  outside these areas there would be an end to the rioting. This
  effectively saw the setting up of the 'no-go areas' where the
  normal rule of law did not operate.] 
  John Gallagher, a Catholic civilian, was shot dead by the Ulster
  Special Constabulary ('B-Specials') during street disturbances
  on the Cathedral Road in Armagh. [John Gallagher was recorded,
  by the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), as the first 'official'
  victim of 'the Troubles'.] 
  In Belfast vicious sectarian riots erupted and continued the following
  day. Many people were killed and injured, and many families were
  forced to move from their homes. British troops took up duties
  on the streets of west Belfast. Sunday 29 March 1970
  There were serious disturbances in Derry following a march
  to commemoration the Easter Rising. The British Army later established
  a cordon around parts of the Bogside. Tuesday 2 March 1971
  Harry Tuzo, then a Lieutenant-General, replaced Vernon Erskine-Crum,
  who had been appointed General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the
  British Army in Northern Ireland on 4 February 1971, but who had
  suffered a heart attack. [Erskine-Crum died on 17 March 1971.] Saturday 20 March 1971
  James Chichester-Clark resigned as Northern Ireland Prime
  Minister in protest at what he viewed as a limited security response
  by the British government. Tuesday 23 March 1971Brian Faulkner succeeds as Northern Ireland Prime Minister
  after defeating William Craig in a Unionist Party leadership election.
  [Faulkner's tenure of office was to prove very short.]
 Thursday 8 July 1971
  During rioting in Derry, two Catholic men, Seamus Cusack (27)
  and Desmond Beattie (19), were shot dead by the British Army in
  disputed circumstances. The Army claimed the men were armed but
  local people maintained that they did not have any weapons at
  any time. The rioting intensified following their deaths. [The
  Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) withdrew from Stormont
  on 16 July 1971 because no inquiry was announced into the killings.] Monday 9 August 1971
  Introduction of Internment. In a series of raids across Northern
  Ireland, 342 people were arrested and taken to makeshift camps.
  There was an immediate upsurge of violence and 17 people were
  killed during the next 48 hours. Of these 10 were Catholic civilians
  who were shot dead by the British Army. Hugh Mullan (38) was the
  first Catholic priest to be killed in the conflict when he was
  shot dead by the British Army as he was giving the last rites
  to a wounded man. Winston Donnell (22) became the first Ulster
  Defence Regiment (UDR) solider to die in 'the Troubles' when he
  was shot by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) near Clady, County
  Tyrone. [There were more arrests in the following days and months.
  Internment was to continue until 5 December 1975. During that
  time 1,981 people were detained; 1,874 were Catholic / Republican,
  while 107 were Protestant / Loyalist. Internment had been proposed
  by Unionist politicians as the solution to the security situation
  in Northern Ireland but was to lead to a very high level of violence
  over the next few years and to increased support for the IRA.] Monday 6 September 1971
  Beginning of an Anti-Internment week throughout County Derry
  organised by the Social Demcoratic and Labour Party (SDLP). All
  Catholic schools closed to enable staff and students to give their
  support. Early in the evening as crowds were dispersing towards
  Free Derry, rioting began. During a lull in the rioting a 14 year
  old girl was shot in the back of the head by the British Army
  and killed. Rioting escalated and continued through the night. Thursday 4 November 1971
  At 5.00am in the morning, the British Army again moved in
  large numbers into the Catholic areas of Derry; Bogside, Creggan
  and Shantallow, breaking their way into homes, and taking a further
  17 men away for internment. The following day, Derry was at a
  standstill with factory workers going on strike, and schools and
  shops etc., closing. Rioting began again on the streets of Derry. Friday 26 November 1971
  General Ford, then Commander of Land Forces in Northern Ireland,
  is believed to have issued orders to Andrew MacLellan, commander
  8 Infantry Brigade (who was in overall command of the troops on
  'Bloody Sunday'), that he should try, "so far as possible,
  to recreate the state of law in the Creggan and Bogside as and
  when he could" (Insight, The Times, 23 April 1972). Tuesday 18 January 1972
  Brian Faulkner, the then Prime Minister
  of Northern Ireland, banned all parades and marches in Northern
  Ireland until the end of the year. Saturday 22 January 1972
  An anti-internment march was held at Magilligan strand, County
  Derry, with several thousand people taking part. As the march
  neared the internment camp it was stopped by members of the Green
  Jackets and the Parachute Regiment of the British Army, who used
  barbed wire to close off the beach. When it appeared that the
  marchers were going to go around the wire, the army then fired
  rubber bullets and CS gas at close range into the crowd. A number
  of witnesses claimed that the paratroopers (who had been bused
  from Belfast to police the march) severely beat a number of protesters
  and had to be physically restrained by their own officers. John
  Hume accused the soldiers of "beating, brutalising and terrorising
  the demonstrators". Monday 24 January 1972
  Frank Lagan, then Chief Superintendent of the Royal Ulster
  Constabulary (RUC) notified Andrew MacLellan, then Commander
  8 Infantry Brigade, of his contact with the Civil Rights Association,
  and informed him of their intention to hold a non-violent demonstration
  protesting against Internment on 30 January 9172. He also asked
  that the march be allowed to take place without military intervention.
  MacLellan agreed to recommend this approach to General Ford, then
  Commander of Land Forces in Northern Ireland. However Ford had
  placed Derek Wilford, Commander of 1st Battalion Parachute
  Regiment, in charge of the proposed arrest operation. [The broad
  decision to carry out arrests were probably discussed by the Northern
  Ireland Committee of the British Cabinet. Edward
    Heath, then British Prime Minister, confirmed on 19 April
  1972 that the plan was known to British government Ministers.] Tuesday 25 January 1972
  General Ford, then Commander of Land Forces in Northern Ireland,
  put Andrew MacLellan, Commander 8 Infantry Brigade, in overall
  command of the operation to contain the march planned for 30 January
  1972. Thursday 27 January 1972
  Two Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officers, Peter Gilgun
  (26) and David Montgomery (20), were shot dead in an attack on
  their patrol car in the Creggan Road, Derry.  The Democratic Unionist
  Party (DUP) association in Derry announced that it was going to
  hold a public religious rally at the same place, on the same date
  and at the same time, as the civil rights march planned for 30
  January 1972. Friday 28 January 1972
  The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA), in
  an effort to avoid a repeat of the violence at Milligan Strand
  on 22 January 1972, placed "special emphasis on the necessity
  for a peaceful incident-free day" at the next NICRA march
  on 30 January 1972 (Irish News, 28 January 1972). [According
  to a Channel 4 documentary Secret History: Bloody Sunday,
  broadcast on 22 January 1992, Ivan Cooper, then a Member of Parliament
  at Stormont, who was involved in the organisation of the march,
  had obtained assurances from the Irish Republican Army (IRA) that
  its members would withdraw from the area during the march.] 
Sunday 30 January 1972'Bloody Sunday'
 
    'Bloody Sunday' refers to the shooting dead by the British Army of 13 civilans (and the wounding of another 14 people, one of whom later died) during a Civil Rights march in Derry.  
The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) march against internment was meant to start at 2.00pm from the Creggan, and proceed to the Guildhall where a rally was planned to take place. The march left 
late (2.50pm approximately) from Central Drive in the Creggan
Estate and took an indirect route towards the Bogside area of
the city. People joined the march along its entire route. At approximately
3.25pm the march passed the 'Bogside Inn' and turned up Westland
Street before going down William Street. Estimates of the number
of marchers at this point vary. Some observers put the number
as high as 20,000 whereas the Widgery Report estimated the number
at between 3,000 and 5,000. The routes from William Street into the city centre were blocked by British Army barriers. At around 3.45pm most of the marchers
followed the organisers instructions and turned right into Rossville
Street to hold a meeting at 'Free Derry Corner'. However a section
of the crowd continued along William Street to the British Army
barricade. A riot developed. (Confrontations between the Catholic
youth of Derry and the British Army had become a common feature
of life in the city and many observers reported that the rioting
was not particularly intense.) 
  At approximately 3.55pm, away from the riot and also out of sight
of the meeting, soldiers (believed to be a machine-gun platoon of Paratroopers) in a derelict building in William Street opened fire (shooting
5 rounds) and injured Damien Donaghy (15) and John Johnston (59).
Both were treated for injuries and were taken to hospital (Johnston died on 16 June 1972).  [The most recent information (see, for example, Pringle, P. and Jacobson, P.; 2000) suggests that an Official IRA member then fired a single shot in response at the soldiers in the derelict building.  This incident happened prior to the main shooting and also out of sight of Rossville Street.] Also around this time (about 3.55pm)
as the riot in William Street was breaking up, Paratroopers requested
permission to begin an arrest operation. By about 4.05pm most
people had moved to 'Free Derry Corner' to attend the meeting.
 
  4.07pm (approximately) An order was given for a 'sub unit' (Support
Company) of the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment to
move into William Street to begin an arrest operation directed
at any remaining rioters. The order authorising the arrest operation
specifically stated that the soldiers were "not to conduct
running battle down Rossville Street" (Official Brigade Log).
The soldiers of Support Company were under the command of Ted
Loden, then a Major in the Parachute Regiment (and were the only
soldiers to fire at the crowd from street level). 
  At approximately 4.10pm soldiers of the Support Company of the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment began to open fire on people in the area of Rossville Street Flats.  By about 4.40pm the shooting ended with 13 people dead and a further 14 injured from gunshots.  The shooting took place in four main places: the car park (courtyard) of Rossville Flats; the forecourt of Rossville Flats (between the Flats and Joseph Place); at the rubble and wire barricade on Rossville Street (between Rossville Flats and Glenfada Park); and in the area around Glenfada Park (between Glenfada Park and Abbey Park). According to British Army evidence 21 soldiers fired their weapons on 'Bloody Sunday' and shot 108 rounds in total. 
  [Most of the basic facts are agreed, however what remains in dispute is whether or not the soldiers came under fire as they entered the area of Rossville Flats.  The soldiers claimed to have come under sustained attack by gunfire and nail-bomb.  None of the eyewitness accounts saw any gun or bomb being used by those who had been shot dead or wounded.  No soldiers were injured in the operation, no guns or bombs were recovered at the scene of the killing.] Monday 31 January 1972
  Reginald Maudling, then British Home Secretary, made a statement
  to the House of Commons on the events of 'Bloody Sunday': "The
  Army returned the fire directed at them with aimed shots and inflicted
  a number of casualties on those who were attacking them with firearms
  and with bombs". Maudling then went on to announce an inquiry
  into the circumstances of the march. Tuesday 1 February 1972
  Edward Heath, then British Prime Minister, announced the appointment
  of Lord Widgery, then Lord Chief Justice, to undertake an inquiry
  into the 13 deaths on 'Bloody Sunday'. The response of the people
  of Derry to this choice of candidate, was for the most part one
  of scepticism and a lack of confidence in his ability to be objective.
  Indeed a number of groups in Derry initially called for non-participation
  in the tribunal but many were persuaded later to given evidence
  to the inquiry. 
  There was an Opposition adjournment debate in the House of Commons
  on the subject of 'Bloody Sunday'. During the debate the then
  Minister of State for Defence gave an official version of events
  and went on to say: "We must also recognise that the IRA
  is waging a war, not only of bullets and bombs but of words....
  If the IRA is allowed to win this war I shudder to think what
  will be the future of the people living in Northern Ireland." 
  The Ministry of Defence also issued a detailed account of the
  British Army's version of events during 'Bloody Sunday' which
  stated that: "Throughout the fighting that ensued, the Army
  fired only at identified targets - at attacking gunmen and bombers.
  At all times the soldiers obeyed their standing instructions to
  fire only in self-defence or in defence of others threatened." Wednesday 2 February 1972
  The funerals of 11 of the dead took place in the Creggan in
  Derry. Tens of thousands attended the funeral including clergy,
  politicians from North and South, and thousands of friends and
  neighbours. Throughout the rest of Ireland prayer services were
  held to coincide with the time of the funerals. In Dublin over
  90 per cent of workers stopped work in respect of those who had
  died, and approximately 100,000 people turned out to march to
  the British Embassy. They carried 13 coffins and black flags.
  Later a crowd attacked the Embassy with stones and bottles, then
  petrol bombs, and the building was burnt to the ground. Monday 14 February 1972
  Lord Widgery arrived in Coleraine, where the 'Bloody Sunday'
  Tribunal was to be based and held a preliminary hearing. During
  this initial hearing Widgery announced that the tribunal would
  be "essentially a fact-finding exercise" and then when
  on to narrow the terms of reference for the tribunal. Monday 21 February 1972
  The first session of the Widgery Tribunal was held in Coleraine,
  County Derry. A total of 17 sessions were held between the 21
  February 1972 and the 14 March 1972. 114 witnesses gave evidence.
  A further three sessions were held at the Royal Courts of Justice
  in London on the 16, 17 and 20 March. Tuesday 22 February 1972
  The Official Irish Republican Army (OIRA) exploded a bomb
  at Aldershot military barracks, the headquarters of the Parachute
  Regiment, killing seven people who were mainly ancilliary staff.
  [This bomb was thought to be an attempted retaliation against
  the regiment who had carried out the 'Bloody Sunday' killings.] Friday 24 March 1972
  The Stormont Parliament was prorogued, and Direct Rule from
  Westminster was imposed on Northern Ireland, much to the outrage
  of Brian Faulkner and Unionist politicians. Monday 10 April 1972
  Lord Widgery submitted the report of his findings to Reginald
  Maudling, the then Home Secretary. Tuesday 18 April 1972
  The Widgery Report on 'Bloody Sunday', Report of the Tribunal
    appointed to inquire into the events on Sunday, 30th
    January 1972, (HC 220) was published. [The findings of this
  report caused outrage among the people of Derry and is often referred
  to by them as the "Widgery Whitewash".] Wednesday 19 April 1972
  Edward Heath, then British Prime Minister, confirmed that the plan to conduct an arrest operation,
  in the event of a riot during the march on 30 January 1972, was
  known to British government Ministers in advance. Sunday 23 April 1972The Sunday Times Insight Team published their account
  of the events of 'Bloody Sunday'.
 Friday 16 June 1972
  John Johnson (59) who had been shot twice on 'Bloody Sunday'
  died. His family was convinced that he died prematurely and that
  his death was a result of the injuries he received and the trauma
  he underwent on that day. Tuesday 4 July 1972
  The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) forwarded a file on about
  the killings on 'Bloody Sunday' to the Director of Public Prosecutions
  (DPP) for Northern Ireland. The Attorney General made a statement
  about this file on 1 August 1972. Tuesday 1 August 1972
  The Attorney General published in Hansard an answer, in response
  to a Parliamentary Question, about the file sent to the Director
  of Public Prosecutions (DPP) for Northern Ireland by the Royal
  Ulster Constabulary (RUC) on the matter of 'Bloody Sunday'. The
  conclusion was that there would be no prosecution of any member
  of the security forces as a result of the killings on 30 January
  1972. Charges in respect of riotous behaviour against some civilians
  were also dropped. Monday 1 January 1973
  Lieutenant Colonel Wilford, the Commanding Officer of the
  First Parachute Regiment on 'Bloody Sunday', was awarded an OBE
  in the New Year's Honours List. x August 1973
  The inquest into the deaths on 'Bloody Sunday' (30 January
  1972) was held. Tuesday 21 August 1973
  Major Hubert O'Neill, then Coroner of the inquest into the
  deaths on 'Bloody Sunday' issued a statement: "This Sunday
  became known as Bloody Sunday and bloody it was. It was quite
  unnecessary. It strikes me that the Army ran amok that day and
  shot without thinking what they were doing. They were shooting
  innocent people. These people may have been taking part in a march
  that was banned but that does not justify the troops coming in
  and firing live rounds indiscriminately. I would say without hesitation
  that it was sheer, unadulterated murder. It was murder." Thursday 5 December 1991
  The Channel 4 television Secret History series broadcast
  a programme about 'Bloody Sunday'. January 1992
  Around the twentieth anniversary of 'Bloody Sunday', relatives
  and friends of those who had been killed made fresh appeals for
  an independent inquiry into events on that day. The Prime Minister,
  John Major, refused to allow such an inquiry. Tuesday 29 December 1992
  John Major, then British Prime Minister, wrote a letter to
  John Hume, then leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party
  (SDLP), which stated that: "The Government made clear in
  1974 that those who were killed on 'Bloody Sunday' should be regarded
  as innocent of any allegation that they were shot whilst handling
  firearms or explosives. I hope that the families of those who
  died will accept that assurance." Saturday 29 June 1996
  Relatives of those who had been killed on 'Bloody Sunday'
  wrote to Prince Charles. In  their letter, 
  they asked him, in his capacity as Commander in Chief of the Parachute
  Regiment, to condemn the soldiers' actions, and to apologise for
  the deaths of their relatives. However, the reply to this letter,
  which came from the Princes private secretary, merely stated that
  it was "necessary to move on, rather than dwell on past tragedies". January 1997
  New evidence came to light that soldiers were actually shooting
  from the top of the Derry walls, as well as ground level. In a
  new book published by Don Mullan (Eyewitness Bloody Sunday: The Truth) evidence was provided which showed
  that at least three of the victims of 'Bloody Sunday' were shot
  from the Derry walls. This evidence was available to the tribunal
  in 1972 but was ignored by the Widgery Tribunal. Friday 23 January 1998
  Bertie Ahern, then Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), laid a wreath at  the ‘Bloody Sunday’ memorial in the Bogside during a visit to Derry. He  called for a full independent Inquiry into the events of ‘Bloody Sunday’.  Saturday 24 January 1998
  A march to commemorate the dead of ‘Bloody Sunday’ took place in London.  Anthony Farrar-Hockley, former commander of British Army land forces in  Northern Ireland, said that he saw no need to apologise for the killing  of 14 people in Derry on ‘Bloody Sunday’. Thursday 29 January 1998
  Tony Blair, then British Prime Minister, announced that there would be a new Inquiry into the events of 'Bloody Sunday'.  The Irish government published its report of the new evidence on the events of 'Bloody Sunday'. Friday 3 April 1998
  The second inquiry into the events surrounding 'Bloody Sunday' in Derry  on 30 January 1972 was opened in the Guildhall in the city. The new  inquiry was headed by an English Law Lord, Lord Saville, and the other  two members of the panel were Edward Somers, a retired New Zealand  judge, and William Hoyt, a judge from Canada. At the opening session  the Chairman read an opening statement. Friday 24 July 1998
  In a ruling on the conduct of the new inquiry into the events of ‘Bloody  Sunday’ the chairman Lord Saville said that soldiers giving evidence  would be entitled to "partial anonymity". Friday 27 November 1998
  British soldiers who were serving in Derry on 30 January 1972 were  offered immunity from prosecution when they provide evidence to the  Saville inquiry into the events of 'Bloody Sunday'. Friday 7 May 1999
  The Bloody Sunday Inquiry ruled that British Army soldier who had fired  their weapons on 30 January 1972 would not be allowed to remain  anonymous.  [The soldiers later managed to have the decision reversed in  the Court of Appeal.] Saturday 29 May 1999
  There was further controversy at the Bloody Sunday Inquiry into the  killings on 30 January 1972 when it became clear that George Robertson,  then British Secretary for Defence, was supporting 17 members of the  Parachute Regiment who were claiming anonymity on the grounds that they  would be in danger if their names were revealed. Wednesday 9 June 1999
  The Bloody Sunday Inquiry admitted that during the autumn of 1998, 73  sets of documents presented to the original Widgery Inquiry had been  released to interested parties' solicitors which included statements by  five ex-Paratroopers who were involved in the events but did not open  fire.  The statements contained the soldiers' names, ranks, and army  serial numbers. Thursday 17 June 1999
  The High Court in London passed a ruling (by 2 to 1) that the 17 former  soldiers giving evidence to the Saville Inquiry into Bloody Sunday  could remain anonymous.  The ruling was criticised by relatives of the  victims. Tuesday 6 July 1999
  Lawyers acting on behalf of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry began an appeal  to the High Court in London over the decision to grant anonymity to  members of the Parachute Regiment.  Derek Wilford, who had commanded Paratroops on Bloody Sunday, was  interviewed on the Today programme on BBC Radio 4 during which he  described the relatives of those killed as "representing the republican  organisation".  Families of the dead reacted angrily to the remarks. Tuesday 20 July 1999
  There was an announcement that the start of the main hearings of the  Bloody Sunday Inquiry would be delayed by six months from 27 September  1999 to 27 March 2000.  The delay was blamed on impending court cases. Wednesday 28 July 1999
  Relatives of the 14 men shot dead and 13 people wounded by British  soldiers in Derry on 30 January 1972 expressed disappointment at an  Appeal Court ruling that the soldiers who opened fire would not be named  during the proceedings of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry. Wednesday 15 September 1999
  Research showed that the forensic testing for use of firearms was  flawed.  The ‘paraffin’ test had been used to find traces of lead  particles, for example on the hands or clothing of people suspected of  firing weapons.  However, research that had been commissioned by the  Bloody Sunday Inquiry found that such testing was "flawed" because, for  example, exposure to car exhaust could show a ‘positive’ result. Thursday 16 September 1999
  There was forensic evidence presented to the Bloody Sunday Inquiry  which indicated that Jim Wray, one of those killed on 30 January 1972,  had been shot in the back as he lay wounded on the ground. Monday 27 September 1999
  Interlocutory hearings of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry took place in the  Guildhall in Derry.   The hearings were chaired by Lord Saville and  discussed the issue of anonymity for up to 500 security force witnesses  to the shootings on 30 January 1972.  [The first of the main hearings  began on 27 March 2000.] Monday 27 March 2000
  The Saville Inquiry into the events of Bloody Sunday began public  hearings at the Guildhall in Derry.  The hearings began with a statement  by Christoper Clarke (QC), then counsel to the Inquiry. Tuesday 1 August 2000
  Edward Somers (Sir), then one of the three judges on the Bloody  Sunday Inquiry, announced that he was stepping down for personal  reasons.  [John Toohey was appointed to replace Somers.] Thursday 3 May 2001
  Martin McGuinness, then Vice-President of Sinn Féin (SF),  formally confirmed that he had been the "second-in-command" of the Irish  Republican Army (IRA) in Derry when the events of 'Bloody Sunday' took  place on 30 January 1972.  The statement was made in advance of his  expected appearance at the Bloody Sunday Inquiry. Thursday 2 August 2001
  Former soldiers who were involved in the shootings in Derry on 'Bloody  Sunday', 30 January 1972, announced that they would seek a judical  review of a ruling by the Inquiry that they must give their evidence in  Derry rather than in Britain.  [The soldiers had won an earlier ruling  allowing them to retain anonymity when giving evidence.] Friday 16 November 2001
  Thirty-six former and serving soldiers who were due to appear at the  Bloody Sunday Inquiry in Derry have won a case at the High Court in  London allowing them to give evidence by video-link from England.  Lord  Saville, then chairman of the Inquiry, had originally ruled that the  soldiers should given evidence in person in Derry.  In their case at the  High Court the soldiers argued that they would be targeted by  Republicans if they were forced to travel to Derry. Tuesday 11 December 2001
  The Saville Inquiry into Bloody Sunday began an appeal in the Court of  Appeal in London against a decision that military witnesses should not  have to travel to Derry to give their evidence.  Soldiers who were on  duty in Derry on 30 January 1972 had claimed in the High Court that  their lives would be in danger if they were forced to attend the Inquiry  in the Guildhall in Derry.  The High Court had ruled in their favour  and against Lord Saville.  [The appeal lasted two days.  The court's  decision was announced on 19 December 2001 when the Court upheld the  decision of the High Court that the soldiers would not have to travel to  Derry to give evidence.] 
  John Reid, then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, announced that  he would challenge in the High Court the new rates of pay awarded to  Queen's Councils (QCs) and barristers at the Saville Inquiry into Bloody  Sunday.  The new daily rate for a senior barrister was set to rise by  £250 to £1,750.  The barristers can also claim up to £250 per hour, to a  maximum of £750 per day, for preparation work and £125 an hour  travelling to and from the Guildhall.  Junior barristers' daily fees  will rise from £750 to £875, and preparation rates from £100 to £125 an  hour.  They also receive £62.50 for travelling time.  [The cost of the  Inquiry to date has been estimated at £60 million.] Sunday 20 January 2002
  Independent Television (ITV) in the United Kingdom (UK) broadcast a film entitled 'Bloody  Sunday' that portrayed the events in Derry on 30 January  1972.  [Prior to broadcast the film had been criticised by some  Unionists in Northern Ireland and by some members of the Conservative  party in Britain.  The film was also given a limited cinema release.] Wednesday 23 January 2002
  The Bloody Sunday Inquiry announced that it would temporarily move to a  location in Britain in order to hear the testimony of British Army  paratroopers who fired the fatal shots in Derry on Bloody Sunday (30  January 1972).  The 36 soldiers had won court cases that supported their  wish not to have to travel to Derry to give evidence. Thursday 7 February 2002
  The Bloody Sunday Inquiry granted permission  to police officers to give their evidence from behind screens.  [Many of  the 20 former and serving officers had applied to be screened from the  public gallery.  It was also believed that 2 officers would ask to given  their evidence in Britain.] Thursday 14 March 2002
  John Taylor, then Ulster Unionist peer (Lord Kilclooney), told the  Bloody Sunday Inquiry that he believed in 1972, and still believed, that  13 gunmen were killed by the British army on Bloody Sunday.  Later  during questioning he partially qualified his assertion and said: "There  are those who now say that innocent people were shot. If that is so it  is a tragedy, but at that time I believed that all of those who were  shot were shot because they were endangering the lives of the security  forces, and that they were armed." Tuesday 23 November 2004The main hearings of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry closed in Derry.
 27 January 2005The Bloody Sunday Inquiry held a special session at the Royal Courts of Justice in London to hear testimoney from Witness X.
 8 February 2008Shaun Woodward, then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, revealed that the Bloody Sunday Inquiry was  still costing £500,000 a month although it has not held hearings since  2005. The total cost of the Inquiry had reached £181.2m (by December  2007).
 6 November 2008Lord Saville, then chairman of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, stated   that his final report into the events of Bloody Sunday would not be completed  for at least another year.
 Wednesday 23 September 2009Lord Saville, then chairman of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, announced that the final report would not be handed to the British government until March 2010. He said he was "extremely disappointed" at the delay.
 Wednesday 24 March 2010The report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry was handed to British government lawyers to allow them to check for evidence which might be considered a threat to national security.
 Thursday 6 May 2010The calling of a British general election meant that the publication of the report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry was postponed until after the establishment of a new government.
 Wednesday 26 May 2010It was announced that the report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry  would be  published on 15 June 2010.
 Tuesday 15 June 2010Publication date of the report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry.
   
 
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