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ISBN
:
9780099472179
Publisher
:
Random House UK
Subject
:
Social Services & Welfare, Criminology, Politics & Government, History
Binding
:
PAPERBACK
Pages
:
400
Year
:
2010
₹
2814.0
₹
2138.0
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View DetailsDescription
The Omagh bomb was the worst massacre in Northern Ireland's modern historyx97;yet from it came a most extraordinary tale of human resilience, as families of murdered people channeled their grief into action. As the bombers congratulated themselves on escaping justice, the families determined on a civil case against them and their organization. In Omagh, on Saturday, August 15, 1998, a massive bomb placed by the so-called Real IRA murdered five men, fourteen women, nine children, and a pair of unborn twins. Although the police believed they knew the identities of the killers, there was insufficient evidence to bring charges. Taking as their motto "For evil to triumph, all that is necessary is for good men to do nothing," families of ten of the dead decided to pursue these men through the civil courts, where the burden of proof is lower. This is the remarkable account of how these familiesx97;who had no knowledge of the law and no money, and included a cleaner, a mechanic, and a bookiex97;became internationally recognized, formidable campaigners and surmounted countless daunting obstacles to win a famous victory. How these mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers turned themselves into the scourge of the Real IRA is not just an astonishing story in itself. It is also a universal story of David challenging Goliath, as well as an inspiration to ordinary people anywhere devastated by terrorism.
Author Biography
Ruth Dudley Edwards is an historian, journalist, and crime writer. Her non-fiction includes Newspapermen;xA0;The Pursuit of Reason: The Economist, 1843-1993; andxA0;Victor Gollancz:xA0;A Biographyx97;winner of the James Tate Black Memorial Prize. Her eleven crime novels are satires on the British Establishment.
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