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The Isle of Man’s Department of Infrastructure has declared a major incident because of the number of fallen trees and their impact on arterial roads and emergency services, the government said ...
Isle of Man Newspapers publishes the Isle of Man's newspapers. They are the Isle of Man Examiner, the Isle of Man Courier and the Manx Independent. They are all weekly newspapers. Its website is www.iomtoday.co.im, as well as owning GEF.im. The company was formerly called the Isle of Man Courier Group until its name was changed in 1992.
This is a list of newspapers in the Isle of Man. The company Isle of Man Newspapers (owned by Tindle) publishes the following three newspapers: [1] Isle of Man Courier (weekly, free) [1] Isle of Man Examiner (weekly) [1] Manx Independent (weekly) [1]
Storm Éowyn (known as Storm Gilles in Germany) [1] is an extremely powerful extratropical cyclone which hit Ireland, the Isle of Man, and the United Kingdom on 24 January 2025. The fifth named storm of the 2024–25 European windstorm season (using the western group naming list), Éowyn was named by the UK Met Office on 21 January 2025.
The Isle of Man Examiner is a newspaper in the Isle of Man. The paper is published every Tuesday, and is owned by Isle of Man Newspapers , which is now part of the Tindle Group . Popular features include business news, the Final Whistle sports supplement and Terry Cringle's Times Past column.
Ongoing: COVID-19 pandemic in the Isle of Man. May: The Isle of Man's Medical Director, Dr Rosalind Ranson, was unfairly dismissed from her position after raising serious questions about the COVID strategy. She was awarded £3M compensation in May 2023. [1]
It was founded as a broadsheet in 1987 after a strike that closed the Isle of Man Examiner, the Isle of Man Times, the Isle of Man Gazette and the Manx Star. The Isle of Man Examiner title was later revived by the Halifax Courier Group, owner of the Isle of Man Courier. The original concept for the Manx Independent came from a local Manx man ...
Ongoing: COVID-19 pandemic in the Isle of Man. The parishes of Arbory and Rushen merged to become the local authority area of Arbory and Rushen. [1] 19 March: The first case of COVID-19 was reported. [2] 26 March: A lockdown began due to rising cases of COVID-19. [3] 1 April: The first COVID-19 related death was reported. [4]