Over 20,000 people march in Derry to mark the 30th anniversary of Bloody Sunday.
The Bloody Sunday commemoration traced the route of the anti internment march on 30 January 1972 when fourteen people were shot dead by British soldiers. Thirteen people were killed on the day while another died from injuries four months later.
The victims were John "Jackie" Duddy, Michael Kelly, Hugh Gilmour, William Nash, John Young, Michael McDaid, Kevin McElhinney, James "Jim" Wray, William McKinney, Gerard "Gerry" McKinney, Gerard "Gerry" Donaghy, Patrick Doherty, Bernard "Barney" McGuigan and John Johnston.
Thousands took to the streets of the Creggan and Bogside to remember the victims of Bloody Sunday.
The remembrance march today was one of the largest ever to take place in Derry and was larger than the original march against internment in 1972. People gathered in Derry from throughout Ireland and abroad. Two recent television documentaries and the Saville Inquiry help to focus public interest in this year's anniversary.
The events of that day remain etched in the minds of the local community.
Among those taking part in the march was John Kelly, whose 17 year old brother Michael was one of the 14 victims.
Speaking at the march, Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin says that the British government have questions to answer at the forthcoming tribunal about what happened on that day.
An RTÉ News report broadcast on 3 February 2002. The reporter is Michael Fisher.