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Quinn brothers' killings : ウィキペディア英語版 | Quinn brothers' killings
Jason, Richard and Mark Quinn were three brothers killed by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) in a firebomb attack on their home in Ballymoney, County Antrim, Northern Ireland on 12 July 1998, towards the end of the three-decade period known as "The Troubles". ==Background==
The Quinn family, consisting of mother Chrissie and sons Richard, Mark and Jason, lived in the Carnany estate in the predominantly Protestant town of Ballymoney. The family was of a mixed religious background. Mother Chrissie was Roman Catholic who herself was from a mixed background and the boys' father Jim Dillon was Catholic. After separating from her estranged husband, Chrissie reared the boys as Protestant "to avoid the hassle".〔("Three little boys were dead" ) ''An Phoblacht'' 16 July 1998 Retrieved 13 November 2012〕 Chrissie lived with her Protestant partner Raymond Craig in Carnany which had only a few Catholic residents and was mostly Protestant, reflecting the religious make-up of Ballymoney itself. The boys, aged 9, 10 and 11, attended a local state school and on the evening before their deaths had been helping to build the estate's Eleventh Night loyalist bonfire.〔 A fourth brother, Lee, was staying with his grandmother in Rasharkin at the time of the attack. The killings took place at the height of the stand-off over the Orange Order march at Drumcree, which created a tense atmosphere in various towns across Northern Ireland. In Ballymoney, the previous year, an off duty Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officer, Gregory Taylor, was beaten to death by a group of loyalist bandsmen.The killing followed a row about the RUC's position after loyal order marches had been banned from the nearby nationalist village of Dunloy.〔("A chronology of the conflict 1997 ) ''CAIN''〕 In the weeks before the fatal attack the children's mother Chrissie had expressed fear that she wasn't welcome in the area and that there was a possibility the family home might be attacked by loyalists.〔(Black Sunday ) People.com 25 July 1998 Retrieved 15 March 2012〕 ''The Ballymoney Times'' a local newspaper in the town, reported a story the week of the deaths, stating that a resident of the Carnany estate called in and was concerned about tension in the area adding something serious might happen "''unless Catholic residents were left alone''".〔(It's ten years since the death of the Quinn boys ) Ballymoney Times 24 July 2008 Retrieved 15 March 2012〕 Various members of Chrissie's family had lived in Carnany but due to several incidents only Chrissie and her sons remained.The family had only been living in the home, which was previously occupied by the boys' aunt, for six days before the attack.
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