Today's news is dominated by the verdict from the inquest into the Ballymurphy killings in 1971. The coroner, Mrs Justice Keegan, issued her findings into the highly controversial killings, which happened after violence erupted on August 9 when soldiers moved into republican strongholds to arrest IRA suspects. She said that “all of the deceased were entirely innocent of wrongdoing on the day in question”.
You can follow our extensive coverage of the verdict both online and in tomorrow's print edition of the News Letter.
In Coronavirus news, the Department of Health recorded one additional Covid-19 related death and 89 new infections in Northern Ireland in the last 24 hours. It takes the coronavirus death toll since the beginning of the pandemic to 2,148.
Nearly half-a-million people in Northern Ireland, more than a third of the entire adult population, has now had two coronavirus vaccine doses. Health Minister Robin Swann said the vaccination programme has “already saved many lives”.
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Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, has announced social distancing for friends and families will end in England on May 17 but it will remain in place in Northern Ireland.
Economy Minister Diane Dodds has launched an ambitious new economic vision which she says will lead to better jobs, wages and quality of life for people in Northern Ireland.
The army did not properly discharge its obligation to protect life in August 1971 when 10 people were killed in Ballymurphy, a major inquest into the killings has found.
Reaction is seeping in after the inquest findings were returned by coroner, Mrs Justice Keegan, into the highly controversial killings, which happened in Ballymurphy on August 9 1971.
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