10th Anniversary Commemorations Of Omar Bombings

Artist and Co designer Sean Hillen takes a look at his glass obelisk sculpture, part of the memorial for the Omagh bomb victims, on August 14, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998. Tomorrow the people of Omagh will formally open a memorial garden to mark 10 years since the bombing.
Artist and Co designer Sean Hillen takes a look at his glass obelisk sculpture, part of the memorial for the Omagh bomb victims, on August 14, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998. Tomorrow the people of Omagh will formally open a memorial garden to mark 10 years since the bombing.
(Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images Europe)
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Floodlights illuminate the Omagh Memorial Garden on August 15, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998. Market Street, the sight of the bomb blast, lies silent and mostly empty as a glass obelisk memorial is unveiled on August 15, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998. Floodlights illuminate a glass obelisk erected in memory of the Omagh bombing victims on August 15, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998. A floral tribute from the Government of Ireland is placed at the Omagh Memorial Garden on August 15, 2008 in Omagh, Northern Ireland. 29 people and two unborn twins were killed when a bomb exploded in the busy market town of Omagh in 1998.
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