Relatives of those murdered in the Shankill bomb have gathered to mark the 30 anniversary of the IRA atrocity.
Nine Protestant men, women and children were murdered in the no-warning bomb.
The families of those who were killed are gathering to mark the anniversary.
DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson is among those attending a service at West Kirk Presbyterian Church.
Ahead of the service, victims' families unveiled a new memorial at the site of the former Frizzell's fish shop on the Shankill Road.

The victims were the fish shop owner, John Frizzell, 63, his daughter Sharon McBride, 29, Michael Morrison, 27, his partner Evelyn Baird, 27, their daughter, Michelle, seven, George Williamson, 63, Gillian Williamson, 49, Wilma McKee, 38, and Leanne Murray, 13.
Leanne's brother Gary was just 15 at the time and saw the bomb go off.
His sister had been in the area with their mother Gina and her partner Paul.
Leanne had gone into the Frizzell's fish shop and was caught in the blast.

The family searched in vain for the young girl in the rubble, then in the hospitals before being directed to the city mortuary.
Gary described how he had been at home when his mother returned.
"I saw her get out of the car screaming and then my mum collapsed in the middle of the street," he said.
"They'd been told that Leanne was dead and was in the mortuary.
"My mum said as soon as she drove into the mortuary, she knew straight away that Leanne was there."
Reverend David Clawson is minister at West Kirk Presbyterian on the Shankill Road, the venue for the memorial service.
"This is a community in which there are many scars, and those scars are physical, those scars are in families, those scars are phycological and they're also within the landscape," Rev Clawson said.
"We can't forget what happened because of that."
At six minutes past one - the precise time the bomb went off - a bell tolled nine times - once for each of the victims.
'Under all that rubble' - 30 years since Shankill Road bombing
Wreaths were llaid close to the scene and a new memorial unveiled - a granite clock with the hands stopped at the time of detonation.

Nine trees have been planted in a park beside the church, as a living memorial to the victims.
Each bears a plaque with the name of one of the deceased.
The IRA claimed it had been targeting a UDA meeting in a room above the fish shop where the bomb was left.
One of the two bombers was also killed in the explosion.
But no meeting was taking place and republicans were accused of carrying out a nakedly sectarian attack.
It led to a spiral of violence which saw six people murdered by loyalists in the following days, before the UDA murdered eight people at the Rising Sun bar in Greysteel in a gun attack a week after the bombing.

Gary Murray says he is so glad the violence is now a thing of the past but the intervening three decades have been incredibly difficult.
"I'm so glad there's no more people being hurt they way we were, that other families don't have to go through the same thing we all went through," he said.
"But losing Leanne, seeing what we saw, going through what we've been through the last 30 years - it has been sheer hell."