<p>Northern Ireland was torn apart by three decades of violence between nationalist and unionist communities that ended with the Good Friday Agreement signed nearly 24 years ago.</p>.<p>The province's majority Protestant unionists favoured continued British rule. Catholic republicans wanted equal rights and reunification with the rest of Ireland.</p>.<p>Here is an overview of the "Troubles" during which more than 3,500 people were killed.</p>.<p>Violence erupts in 1968 when police use force against a peaceful Catholic civil rights demonstration in Londonderry demanding an end to discrimination in voting, jobs and housing.</p>.<p>The situation degenerates as Catholic meetings and demonstrations end in clashes with the police and Protestants.</p>.<p>In August 1969 as sectarian violence grips the province, British troops are deployed.</p>.<p>In 1970 a Catholic guerrilla group, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), begins a campaign of bombings and shootings against the troops.</p>.<p>Unionist paramilitary groups respond, mostly by killing Catholics, further driving a wedge between the communities.</p>.<p>Violence explodes after January 1972 when 13 people are killed on "Bloody Sunday" after British soldiers open fire on a peaceful Catholic civil rights march in Londonderry.</p>.<p>London suspends the Northern Ireland provincial government two months later, leading to decades of direct rule from the British capital.</p>.<p>In 1974 the IRA extends the bombing campaign to Britain with attacks on pubs in Guildford, Woolwich and Birmingham that kill about 30 people in all.</p>.<p>It also assassinates key British establishment figures, including Queen Elizabeth II's cousin Lord Louis Mountbatten in rural northwest Ireland in 1979.</p>.<p>On the same day 18 British soldiers are killed in an IRA ambush at Warrenpoint in Northern Ireland.</p>.<p>A turning point comes in 1981 when IRA inmate Bobby Sands and nine comrades die on hunger strike at Maze Prison demanding political prisoner status.</p>.<p>Their deaths draw global sympathy for the republican cause.</p>.<p>The following year the IRA's political wing Sinn Fein wins its first seats in parliament. A year after, Gerry Adams is elected party chief.</p>.<p>The IRA continues to strike in England, with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher narrowly escaping death in a bomb attack on the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the 1984 Conservative party conference in which five people die.</p>.<p>Seven years later they attempt to assassinate her successor, John Major, in a mortar attack on 10 Downing Street.</p>.<p>In 1992 and 1993 two massive bombings kill four people and cause major damage in the City of London financial hub.</p>.<p>An attempt by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath to establish a power-sharing executive founders in 1973 after a unionist general strike.</p>.<p>Thatcher signs an Anglo-Irish accord in 1985, acknowledging Dublin's say in Northern Ireland's affairs.</p>.<p>Behind-the-scenes talks lead to an IRA ceasefire in 1994, which breaks down as negotiations stall.</p>.<p>In July 1997, after Tony Blair becomes Britain's Labour prime minister, Sinn Fein gets a place at the negotiating table after the IRA declares a new ceasefire.</p>.<p>The Good Friday Agreement is signed on April 10, 1998 between London, Dublin and the main Northern Ireland political parties.</p>.<p>It leads to a new semi-autonomous Northern Ireland with a power-sharing government between Protestants and Catholics.</p>.<p>The deadliest single atrocity of the period comes four months after the accord when 29 people are killed in the town of Omagh in a bomb planted by a dissident group, the Real IRA.</p>.<p>The attack has the effect of bolstering, rather than undermining, the peace accord.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>
<p>Northern Ireland was torn apart by three decades of violence between nationalist and unionist communities that ended with the Good Friday Agreement signed nearly 24 years ago.</p>.<p>The province's majority Protestant unionists favoured continued British rule. Catholic republicans wanted equal rights and reunification with the rest of Ireland.</p>.<p>Here is an overview of the "Troubles" during which more than 3,500 people were killed.</p>.<p>Violence erupts in 1968 when police use force against a peaceful Catholic civil rights demonstration in Londonderry demanding an end to discrimination in voting, jobs and housing.</p>.<p>The situation degenerates as Catholic meetings and demonstrations end in clashes with the police and Protestants.</p>.<p>In August 1969 as sectarian violence grips the province, British troops are deployed.</p>.<p>In 1970 a Catholic guerrilla group, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), begins a campaign of bombings and shootings against the troops.</p>.<p>Unionist paramilitary groups respond, mostly by killing Catholics, further driving a wedge between the communities.</p>.<p>Violence explodes after January 1972 when 13 people are killed on "Bloody Sunday" after British soldiers open fire on a peaceful Catholic civil rights march in Londonderry.</p>.<p>London suspends the Northern Ireland provincial government two months later, leading to decades of direct rule from the British capital.</p>.<p>In 1974 the IRA extends the bombing campaign to Britain with attacks on pubs in Guildford, Woolwich and Birmingham that kill about 30 people in all.</p>.<p>It also assassinates key British establishment figures, including Queen Elizabeth II's cousin Lord Louis Mountbatten in rural northwest Ireland in 1979.</p>.<p>On the same day 18 British soldiers are killed in an IRA ambush at Warrenpoint in Northern Ireland.</p>.<p>A turning point comes in 1981 when IRA inmate Bobby Sands and nine comrades die on hunger strike at Maze Prison demanding political prisoner status.</p>.<p>Their deaths draw global sympathy for the republican cause.</p>.<p>The following year the IRA's political wing Sinn Fein wins its first seats in parliament. A year after, Gerry Adams is elected party chief.</p>.<p>The IRA continues to strike in England, with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher narrowly escaping death in a bomb attack on the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the 1984 Conservative party conference in which five people die.</p>.<p>Seven years later they attempt to assassinate her successor, John Major, in a mortar attack on 10 Downing Street.</p>.<p>In 1992 and 1993 two massive bombings kill four people and cause major damage in the City of London financial hub.</p>.<p>An attempt by Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath to establish a power-sharing executive founders in 1973 after a unionist general strike.</p>.<p>Thatcher signs an Anglo-Irish accord in 1985, acknowledging Dublin's say in Northern Ireland's affairs.</p>.<p>Behind-the-scenes talks lead to an IRA ceasefire in 1994, which breaks down as negotiations stall.</p>.<p>In July 1997, after Tony Blair becomes Britain's Labour prime minister, Sinn Fein gets a place at the negotiating table after the IRA declares a new ceasefire.</p>.<p>The Good Friday Agreement is signed on April 10, 1998 between London, Dublin and the main Northern Ireland political parties.</p>.<p>It leads to a new semi-autonomous Northern Ireland with a power-sharing government between Protestants and Catholics.</p>.<p>The deadliest single atrocity of the period comes four months after the accord when 29 people are killed in the town of Omagh in a bomb planted by a dissident group, the Real IRA.</p>.<p>The attack has the effect of bolstering, rather than undermining, the peace accord.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos</strong></p>