
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Just 3 per cent of residents on over 500 streets in Belfast are actively against dual Irish and English signs in the city while nine in ten support them. That’s according to new research from Conradh na Gaeilge. It comes as the PSNI are investigating “hate-motivated” damage to a street sign with Irish on it in east Belfast.
We discuss further with Ciaran Mac Giolla Bhéin, Coordinator of the West Belfast Language Plan and President of Conradh na Gaeilge and Ben Lowry, Editor of the Belfast Newsletter.
By Newstalk4.8
55 ratings
Just 3 per cent of residents on over 500 streets in Belfast are actively against dual Irish and English signs in the city while nine in ten support them. That’s according to new research from Conradh na Gaeilge. It comes as the PSNI are investigating “hate-motivated” damage to a street sign with Irish on it in east Belfast.
We discuss further with Ciaran Mac Giolla Bhéin, Coordinator of the West Belfast Language Plan and President of Conradh na Gaeilge and Ben Lowry, Editor of the Belfast Newsletter.

67 Listeners

2 Listeners

54 Listeners

15 Listeners

59 Listeners

24 Listeners

13 Listeners

150 Listeners

55 Listeners

23 Listeners

3 Listeners

4 Listeners

16 Listeners

78 Listeners

47 Listeners

10 Listeners

29 Listeners

48 Listeners

111 Listeners

6 Listeners

38 Listeners

7 Listeners