Public sector workers across Northern Ireland are taking part in a day of strike action, bringing many services in the region to a standstill.
An estimated 150,000 public sector workers are taking part in the walkouts over pay.
– Why are workers going on strike?
Unions have been involved in long-running pay disputes, in some cases lasting for several years.
Workers are demanding that pay awards made to counterparts elsewhere in the UK are introduced in Northern Ireland.
Workers in health, education, the civil service and public transport have taken part in strike action over the past 12 months, but Thursday is the first time all of the industrial action has been co-ordinated on a single date.
How has it come to this?
Setting public sector pay is a devolved issue in Northern Ireland. However, the Stormont powersharing Assembly and executive has been dormant for almost two years.
Stormont departments are being run by senior civil servants and they have said that a budget set for the region by Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris last year did not provide them with enough funds to offer pay awards to workers.
What has been done to try to avoid the industrial action?
During his negotiations with the Stormont parties, Mr Heaton-Harris offered a £3.3 billion package to stabilise finances in Northern Ireland, including £600 million to settle public sector pay claims.
However, the British government has insisted the package is dependent on a deal to restore Stormont.
The DUP, the largest unionist party, which collapsed the powersharing institutions in protest at post-Brexit trading arrangements, has said the British government should divorce the issue of public sector pay from the wider financial offer and settle the workers’ claims immediately.
The other parties, while urging the DUP to return to Stormont, have also called for the Government to release the funds to public sector workers.
Mr Heaton-Harris has, however, insisted he does not have the power to intervene in what is a devolved issue.
What has the head of the civil service said?
Jayne Brady, head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, recently wrote to Mr Heaton-Harris calling for funding urgently to be released in a late bid to prevent the strike action.
Her letter said: “You have publicly stated that the UK Government cannot, and will not, stand by and allow public services and finances to decline further.
“This Thursday will represent the single biggest day of industrial action in a generation, reflecting the strength of feeling and deteriorating, and frankly untenable, position we are now in.”
How many workers are taking part in the industrial action?
Up to 16 trade unions representing more than 150,000 workers are taking part. However, not all the workers are on picket lines.
Which services are being disrupted?
Unions on strike represent workers right across the public sector in Northern Ireland so disruption is substantial.
In health, nurses, midwives, ambulance staff and other workers are involved.
Health chiefs warned that disruption will be on a “massive and unprecedented scale”.
Minimum services, equivalent to those available on Christmas Day, are being offered.
The Department of Health has advised people to “take all sensible steps to reduce your chances of requiring health service treatment on the day”.
Schools across Northern Ireland are closed as all the main teaching unions and other education staff are on strike.
Public transport is not running.
Normal road gritting services are not being carried out, with the Department for Infrastructure advising people to avoid all but necessary travel on Thursday.
MOT services, emergency flood response and road repair services are also impacted.
While officers from the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) are not on strike, civilian police staff in participating unions are joining the industrial action. There is a restricted services in courts.
Regarding social security benefits, the Department for Communities has said it is working to ensure that payments will be made on Thursday.
Those in receipt of jobseeker’s allowance are excused from signing on on Thursday and it is advised that customers may experience delays in telephone and online services.
What else happened on Thursday?
Unions called on the public to support their industrial action.
A series of marches and parades have taken place in locations across Northern Ireland. Thousands of people attended the largest rally in Belfast city centre.
Are there other concerns?
Northern Ireland is currently in the grip of severe winter weather with ice and snow already causing travel and schools disruption.
A normal road gritting service is not expected to resume for seven days from midnight on Wednesday as members of the Unite and GMB unions are involved in week-long industrial action.
Hospitals are already struggling to deal with the impacts of winter pressures, which will be exacerbated by the postponement of routine surgeries due to the strike action.
Will Thursday be the end of the matter?
No. Unions have said they will continue with industrial action until the outstanding pay claims are settled.
Will there be action beyond strikes?
Nipsa, one of the largest unions in Northern Ireland, has called for a campaign of “civil disobedience” to protect public services in Northern Ireland.
It has been suggested this could involve blocking roads and occupying buildings.
The other participating unions have not echoed this call.
The Police Federation for Northern Ireland, which represents rank-and-file PSNI officers, has called on striking workers to act in a “proportionate and lawful manner”.