The Real Irish Republican Army or Real IRA,

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Apr 022015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

The Real Irish Republican Army or the Real IRA, also referred to as the New IRA, is an Irish republican paramilitary organisation which aims to bring about a united Ireland. It formed in the year 1997 following a split in the Provisional IRA, which had declared a ceasefire that year. Like the Provisional IRA before it, the RIRA sees itself as the only rightful successor to the original Irish Republican Army and styles itself as simply “the Irish Republican Army” in English or Óglaigh na hÉireann in Irish. It is an illegal organisation in the Republic of Ireland and designated as a terrorist organisation in the United Kingdom and the United States.

Since its formation, the RIRA has waged a campaign in Northern Ireland against the British Army and the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), formerly the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC). The RIRA is the biggest and most active of the “dissident republican” paramilitaries operating against the British security forces. It has targeted the security forces in gun attacks and bombings, as well as with grenades, mortars and rockets. The organisation has also been responsible for a number of bombings in Northern Ireland and England with the goal of causing economic harm and/or disruption. The most notable of these was the 15th of August in 1998 Omagh bombing, which killed 29 people. After the bombing, the RIRA went on ceasefire, but began operations again in 2000. In the of March 2009, it claimed responsibility for an attack on Massereene Barracks that killed two British soldiers, the first to be killed in Northern Ireland since 1997.

The Real IRA has also been involved in vigilantism, mainly against alleged drug dealers and organized crime gangs. In Dublin particularly, it has been accused of extorting and engaging in feuds with these gangs.

In the July of 2012, it was reported that Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD) and other small republican militant groups were merging with the Real IRA. As before, the group continues to refer to itself as “the Irish Republican Army”.

In the July of 1997, the Provisional IRA called a ceasefire. On the 10th of October 1997, a Provisional IRA General Army Convention was held in Falcarragh, County Donegal. At the convention, Provisional IRA Quartermaster General Michael McKevitt, also a member of the 12-person Provisional IRA Executive, denounced the leadership and called for an end to the group’s ceasefire and to the participation in the Northern Ireland peace process. He was backed by his partner and fellow Executive member Bernadette Sands-McKevitt. The pair were out-manoeuvred by the leadership, and a key ally, Kevin McKenna, was voted off the IRA Army Council leaving the two dissidents isolated. The convention backed the pro-ceasefire line, and on the 26th of October McKevitt and Sands-McKevitt resigned from the Executive along with several other members.

In the November of 1997, McKevitt and other dissidents held a meeting in a farmhouse in Oldcastle, County Meath, and a new organisation, styling itself Óglaigh na hÉireann, was formed. The organisation attracted disaffected Provisional IRA members from Derry and the republican stronghold of South Armagh, as well as other areas including Dublin and Belfast cities and Counties Limerick, Tipperary, Louth, Tyrone, Monaghan, and Kerry.

The name “Real IRA” entered common usage when members had a roadblock in Jonesborough, County Armagh and told motorists “We’re from the IRA. The real IRA”.

Objectives
The RIRA’s ultimate objective is a united Ireland by forcing the end of British sovereignty over Northern Ireland through the use of physical force. The organisation rejects the Mitchell Principles and the Good Friday Agreement, comparing the latter to the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty which resulted in the partition of Ireland. The organisation aims to uphold an uncompromising form of Irish republicanism and opposes any political settlement that falls short of Irish unity and independence.

Sands-McKevitt, sister of hunger striker Bobby Sands and a founder of the RIRA’s political wing, the 32 County Sovereignty Movement, said in an interview that “Bobby did not die for cross-border bodies with executive powers. He did not die for nationalists to be equal British citizens within the Northern Ireland state”. The RIRA adopts similar tactics to those used by the Provisional IRA in the 1990s, primarily using bombs in town centres to damage the economic infrastructure of Northern Ireland. The organisation also attempts to kill members of the security forces using land mines, home-made mortars and car bombs, and targets England using incendiary and car bombs to “spread terror and disruption”.

Early campaign
The organisation’s first action was an attempted bombing in Banbridge, County Down on the 7th of January 1998. The plot involved a 300 lb (140 kg) car bomb, but it was thwarted after being defused by security forces. The organisation continued its campaign in late February, with bombings in Moira, County Down and Portadown, County Armagh. On the 9th of May the organisation formally announced its existence in a coded telephone call to Belfast media claiming responsibility for a mortar attack on a police station in Belleek, County Fermanagh.

The organisation also carried out attacks in Newtownhamilton and Newry, and a second attack in Banbridge on the 1st of August injured 35 people and caused £3.5 million of damage when a 500 lb (230 kg) car bomb explodedDespite these attacks the RIRA lacked a significant base and was heavily infiltrated by informers. This led to a series of high-profile arrests and seizures by the Garda Síochána in the first half of 1998, including the death of member Rónán Mac Lochlainn who was shot dead trying to escape from police following an attempted robbery of a security van in County Wicklow.

Omagh bombing

On the 15th of August 1998 the RIRA left a car containing 500 lb of home-made explosives in the centre of Omagh, County Tyrone. The bombers could not find a parking space near the intended target of the courthouse, and the car was left 400 metres away. As a result three inaccurate telephone warnings were issued, and the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) believed the bomb was actually located outside the courthouse. They attempted to establish a security cordon to keep civilians clear of the area, which inadvertently pushed people closer to the actual location of the bomb. Shortly after, the bomb exploded killing 29 people and injuring 220 others, in what became the single deadliest strike of the Troubles.

The bombing caused a major outcry throughout the world, and the Irish and British governments introduced new legislation in an attempt to destroy the organisation. The RIRA also came under pressure from the Provisional IRA, when Provisional IRA members visited the homes of 60 people connected with the RIRA and ordered them to disband and stop interfering with Provisional IRA arms dumps. With the organisation under intense pressure, which included McKevitt and Sands-McKevitt being forced from their home after the media named McKevitt in connection with the bombing, the RIRA called a ceasefire on 8th of September.

Ceasefire

Following the declaration of the ceasefire the RIRA began to regroup, and by the end of October had elected a new leadership and were planning their future direction. In late December Irish government representative Martin Mansergh held a meeting with McKevitt in Dundalk, in an attempt to convince McKevitt to disband the RIRA. McKevitt refused, stating that members would be left defenceless to attacks by the Provisional IRA. In 1999 the RIRA began preparations for a renewed campaign, and in May three members travelled across Europe to Split in Croatia to purchase arms which were subsequently smuggled back to Ireland. On the 20th of October ten people were arrested when Gardaí raided a RIRA training camp near Stamullen, County Meath.

Officers found a firing range inside a disused wine cellar being used as an underground bunker, and seized weapons including an assault rifle, a submachine gun, a semi-automatic pistol and an RPG-18 rocket launcher. An earlier version of the rocket launcher, the RPG-7, had been in the possession of the Provisional IRA from as early as 1972, but this was the first time the RPG-18 had been found in the possession of a paramilitary organisation in Ireland. Among those convicted were Alan Ryan, who was on bail for possession of a loaded revolver at his home in Dublin.

Return to activity

On the 20th of January 2000 the RIRA issued a call-to-arms in a statement to the Irish News. The statement condemned the Northern Ireland Executive, and stated: “Once again, Óglaigh na hÉireann declares the right of the Irish people to the ownership of Ireland. We call on all volunteers loyal to the Irish Republic to unite to uphold the Republic and establish a permanent national parliament representative of all the people.” The RIRA launched its new campaign on the 25th of February with an attempted bombing of Shackleton Army Barracks in Ballykelly. The bombers were disturbed as they were assembling the device, which would have caused mass murder if detonated, according to soldiers

On the 29th of February a rocket launcher similar to one seized in the 1999 raid was found near an army base in Dungannon, County Tyrone, and on the 15th of March three men were arrested following the discovery of 500 lb of home-made explosives when the RUC searched two cars in Hillsborough, County Down. On the 6th April a bomb attack took place at Ebrington Barracks in Derry. RIRA members lowered a device consisting of 5 lb of homemade explosives over the perimeter fence using ropes, and the bomb subsequently exploded damaging the fence and an unmanned guardhouse.

Bombings in England

After the Omagh bombing, the RIRA leadership were unwilling to launch a full-scale campaign in Northern Ireland due to the possibility of civilians being killed. Instead they decided to launch a series of attacks in England, in particular London, which they hoped would attract disenchanted Provisional IRA members to join the RIRA. On the 1st of June 2000 a bomb damaged Hammersmith Bridge; a symbolic target for Irish republican paramilitary groups. The bridge had previously been targeted by the Irish Republican Army on the 29th of March 1939 as part of its Sabotage Campaign, and by the Provisional IRA on the 24th of April 1996.

One month later on the 19th of July, security forces carried out a controlled explosion on a bomb left at Ealing Broadway station and public transport was disrupted when the Metropolitan Police closed Victoria and Paddington train stations and halted services on the London Underground. On the 21st of September a rocket-propelled grenade was fired at the MI6 headquarters using an RPG-22 rocket launcher, which generated headlines around the world. On the 21st of February 2001 a bomb disguised as a torch left outside a Territorial Army base in Shepherd’s Bush seriously injured a 14-year-old cadet, who was blinded and had his hand blown off. A second attack in Shepherd’s Bush, the 4th of March BBC bombing, injured a civilian outside the BBC Television Centre. The explosion was captured by a BBC cameraman, and the footage was broadcast on TV stations worldwide, and gained mass publicity for the group. On the 14th of April a bomb exploded at a postal sorting office in Hendon, causing minor damage but no injuries. Three weeks later on 6 May a second bomb exploded at the same building, causing slight injuries to a passer-by. On the 3rd of August Ealing bombing injured seven people, and on the 3rd of November a car bomb containing 60 lb of home-made explosives was planted in the centre of Birmingham. The bomb did not fully detonate and no one was injured.

Renewed campaign in Northern Ireland

The successful attack on Hammersmith Bridge encouraged the RIRA leadership to launch further attacks in Northern Ireland. On the 19th of June 2000 a bomb was found in the grounds of Hillsborough Castle, home of Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Peter Mandelson. On the 30th of June a bomb exploded on the Dublin-to-Belfast railway line near the village of Meigh in County Armagh. The explosion damaged the tracks, and caused disruption to train services. On the 9th of July a car bomb damaged buildings in Stewartstown, County Tyrone including an RUC station, and on the 10th of August an attack in Derry was thwarted by the RUC after a van containing a 500 lb bomb failed to stop at a police checkpoint. Following a car chase the bombers escaped across the Irish border, and the Irish Army carried out a controlled explosion on the bomb after the van was found abandoned in County Donegal. On the 13th of September two 80 lb bombs were planted at the Magilligan army camp in County Londonderry, one of which was planted in a wooden hut and partially exploded when a soldier opened the door to the hut. The second bomb was found during a follow-up search and made safe by bomb disposal experts. On the 11th of November the RUC and British Army prevented a mortar attack after stopping a van near Derrylin, County Fermanagh, and the RUC prevented a further attack on the 13th of January 2001 when an 1100 lb bomb was found in Armagh — the largest bomb found in several years according to the RUC.

On the 23rd of January the RIRA attacked Ebrington Army Barracks in Derry for a second time, firing a mortar over a perimeter fence. A mortar similar to the one used in the attack was found by Gardaí near Newtowncunningham on the 13th of February, and British army bomb disposal experts made safe another mortar found between Dungannon and Carrickmore on the 12th of April. On the 1st of August a 40 lb bomb was discovered in a car at the long stay car park of Belfast International Airport following a telephone warning, and was made safe with two controlled explosions by bomb disposal experts. In the December a six-day security operation ended when a 70 lb bomb found under railway tracks at Killeen Bridge near Newry was successfully defused. The operation began following a number of telephone warnings, and both the road and railway line connecting Newry to Dundalk were closed due to security alerts. A pipe bomb was discovered at a police officer’s home in Annalong, County Down on the 3rd of January 2002, and two teenage boys were injured in County Armagh on 2 March when a bomb hidden in a traffic cone exploded. On the 29th of March 2002 the RIRA targeted a former member of the Royal Irish Regiment from Sion Mills, County Tyrone, with a bomb attached to his car that failed to explode. On the 1st of August 2002 a civilian worker was killed by an explosion at a Territorial Army base in Derry. The man, a 51-year-old former member of the Ulster Defence Regiment, was the thirtieth person killed by the RIRA.

Arrests

Despite the RIRA’s renewed activity, the organisation became increasingly weaker due to the arrest of key members and continued infiltration by informers. McKevitt was arrested on the 29th of March 2001 and charged with membership of an illegal organisation and directing terrorism, and remanded into custody. In the July of 2001, following the arrests of McKevitt and other RIRA members, British and Irish government sources hinted that the organisation was now in disarray. Other key figures were jailed, including the RIRA’s Director of Operations, Liam Campbell, who was convicted of membership of an illegal organisation, and Colm Murphy who was convicted of conspiring to cause the Omagh bombing, although this conviction was later overturned on appeal.

On the 10th of April 2002, Ruairi Convey, from Donaghmede, Dublin was jailed for three years for membership of the RIRA. During a search of his home a list of names and home addresses of members of the Gardaí’s Emergency Response Unit was found. Five RIRA members were also convicted in connection with the 2001 bombing campaign in England, and received sentences varying from 16 years to 22 years imprisonment. In the October of 2002, McKevitt and other RIRA members imprisoned in Portlaoise Prison issued a statement calling for the organisation to stand down. After a two-month trial, McKevitt was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment in August 2003 after being convicted of directing terrorism.

2002-2007

After McKevitt’s imprisonment, the RIRA regrouped. The RIRA claimed responsibility for a series of firebomb attacks against premises in Belfast in the November of 2004, and an attack on a Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) patrol in Ballymena during March 2006 was attributed to the RIRA by the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC). On the 9th of August 2006 a number of fire bomb attacks by the RIRA hit businesses in Newry, County Down. Buildings belonging to JJB Sports and Carpetright were destroyed, and ones belonging to MFI and TK Maxx were badly damaged. On the 27th of October 2006, a large amount of explosives was found in Kilbranish, Mount Leinster, County Carlow by police, who believe the RIRA were trying to derail the peace process with a bomb attack. The IMC believe the RIRA were also responsible for a failed mortar attack on Craigavon PSNI Station on the 4th of December 2006. The IMC’s October 2006 report stated that the RIRA remains “active and dangerous” and that it seeks to “sustain its position as a terrorist organisation”. The RIRA has previously stated it has no intention of calling a ceasefire unless a declaration of intent to withdraw from Northern Ireland is made by the British Government.
In a lengthy interview with An Phoblacht newspaper in 2003, the leadership of the Provisional IRA said that the RIRA had “no coherent strategy”.

The Real IRA were suspected of complicity in the murder in the December of 2006 of drug-dealer Martin ‘Marlo’ Hyland. Hyland was shot dead at his Dublin home, along with a plumber, Anthony Campbell, who was carrying out work at the house. The organisation was embroiled in a feud with Hyland’s gang at the time.

2007-2013

On the 8th of November 2007 two RIRA members shot an off-duty PSNI officer as he sat in his car on Bishop Street in Derry, causing injuries to his face and arm. On the 12th of November another PSNI member was shot by RIRA members in Dungannon, County Tyrone. On the 7th of February 2008, the RIRA stated that, after experiencing a three-year period of reorganisation, it intends to “go back to war” by launching a new offensive against “legitimate targets”. It also, despite having initially apologised for the Omagh bombing, denied any large scale involvement with the attack and said that their part had only gone as far as their codeword being used. On the 12th of May 2008 the RIRA seriously injured a member of the PSNI when a booby trap bomb exploded underneath his car near Spamount, County Tyrone. On the 25th of September 2008 the RIRA shot a man in the neck in St Johnston, near the Derry border. The same man was targeted in a pipe bomb attack on his home on the 25th of October, the RIRA did not claim responsibility for the attack, but security forces believe they were responsible for it.

On the 7th of March 2009, the RIRA claimed responsibility for the 2009 Massereene Barracks shooting. This shooting occurred outside the Massereene Barracks as four soldiers were receiving a pizza delivery. Two soldiers were killed, and the other two soldiers and two deliverymen were injured. On the 3rd of April 2009 the RIRA in Derry claimed responsibility for carrying out a punishment shooting against a convicted rapist who was awaiting sentencing for raping a 15-year-old girl. The RIRA were also blamed for orchestrating rioting in the Ardoyne area of Belfast on the 13th of July 2009 as an Apprentice Boys parade was passing. A number of PSNI officers were injured in the rioting and at least one shot was fired at police. In the early November, the Independent Monitoring Commission released a report stating that the threat from the RIRA and other dissident republicans was at its most serious level since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement.

When drug dealer Sean Winters was shot dead in Portmarnock, north Dublin, in September 2010, the Real IRA “emerged as the chief suspects”. They were also suspected of shooting dead drugs gang leader Michael Kelly in Coolock in September 2011.

On the 5th of October 2010, a car bomb exploded outside a branch of the Ulster Bank on Culmore Road in Derry. Two police officers were slightly injured in the blast, which also damaged a hotel and other businesses. Several telephone warnings were received an hour prior to the blast allowing police to cordon off the area. The RIRA later claimed responsibility in a telephone call to the Derry Journal.

A large Real IRA explosives dump and arms cache were discovered in Dunleer, County Louth, by Gardaí in October 2010, following a weekend of searches and arrests in the east of the country. In addition, two Real IRA men were charged in Dublin’s non-jury Special Criminal Court of membership of an illegal organisation. At this time the Real IRA claimed responsibility for kidnapping and shooting dead of one of their members, Kieran Doherty, for alleged drug dealing. Further significant seizures of Real IRA arms and explosives were made by the Gardai during 2012 and 2013, leading to the arrest of over a dozen persons. In 2011 Michael Campbell, brother of Liam, was found guilty in Vilnius, Lithuania, of trying to purchase arms and explosives and was sentenced to twelve years in jail. In the October of 2013, Campbell was freed on appeal only to the have the Lithuanian Supreme Court order a retrial in June 2014. Campbell has maintained his innocence – accusing British intelligence of attempting to frame him. In the June of 2013 Gardai arrested eight people after a Real IRA meeting and uncovered a massive haul of the plastic explosive Semtex in two raids in Dublin. In the October of 2013 the Real IRA claimed responsibility for “executing” an alleged leading cocaine dealer in north Belfast.

Since the merger (“New IRA”)

On the 26th of July 2012, it was reported that Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD) and other small republican militant groups were merging with the Real IRA. As before, the group would continue to refer to itself as “the Irish Republican Army”. It issued the following statement:

The leadership of the Irish Republican Army remains committed to the full realisation of the ideals and principles enshrined in the Proclamation of 1916.

In recent years the establishment of a free and independent Ireland has suffered setbacks due to the failure among the leadership of Irish nationalism and fractures within republicanism. The root cause of conflict in our country is the subversion of the nation’s inalienable right to self-determination and this has yet to be addressed. Instead the Irish people have been sold a phoney peace, rubber-stamped by a token legislature in Stormont.

Non-conformist republicans are being subjected to harassment, arrest and violence by the forces of the British crown; others have been interned on the direction of an English overlord. It is Britain, not the IRA, which has chosen provocation and conflict.

The IRA’s mandate for armed struggle derives from Britain’s denial of the fundamental right of the Irish people to national self-determination and sovereignty — so long as Britain persists in its denial of national and democratic rights in Ireland the IRA will have to continue to assert those rights.

The necessity of armed struggle in pursuit of Irish freedom can be avoided through the removal of the British military presence in our country, the dismantling of their armed militias and the declaration of an internationally observed timescale that details the dismantling of British political interference in our country.
After the merger, the media began to refer to the group as the “New IRA”. As well as RAAD, the alliance includes an east Tyrone group thought to be responsible for killing PSNI officer Ronan Kerr in 2011, and a Belfast group who badly wounded PSNI officer Peadar Heffron in 2010. The Continuity IRA, and the group often referred to as ONH, remain independent. The PSNI reckoned that the new group has a membership of “between 250 and 300 military activists, backed up by associates”. In the November of 2012 it claimed responsibility for shooting dead a Prison Officer near Craigavon, the first prison officer to be killed since 1993.

On the 3rd of September 2012 prominent Real IRA member Alan Ryan was shot dead in Dublin. Gardaí believed that he had been involved in a feud with major crime gangs from whom he was trying to extort money. In the aftermath of Ryan’s death an internal feud developed in the Real IRA. Ryan’s replacement as leader and another associate were shot, but not fatally, in November 2012, allegedly on the orders of the Northern leadership. In the February of 2013 several associates of Ryan were arrested for extortion in Sligo. In the March of 2013, another prominent ex-member of the Real IRA, Peter Butterly from Dunleer, was shot dead; three Dublin men, allegedly from the Alan Ryan faction, who were also charged with membership of an illegal organisation, were charged with his murder.

In the February of 2014 the group sent seven letter bombs to British Army recruitment offices in south-east England; the first time republicans had struck in Britain since 2001. The following month, a PSNI landrover was hit by an explosively formed projectile in Belfast. A civilian car was also hit by debris, but there were no injuries. The Real IRA claimed responsibility.

Structure and status

The RIRA has a command structure similar to the Provisional IRA, with a seven-member Army Council consisting of a chief of staff, quartermaster general, director of training, director of operations, director of finance, director of publicity, and adjutant general. The rank-and-file members operate in active service units of covert cells to prevent the organisation from being compromised by informers. As of June 2005, the organisation is believed to have a maximum of about 150 members, according to a statement by the Irish Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Michael McDowell.

The RIRA also has a political wing, the 32 County Sovereignty Movement (formerly the 32 County Sovereignty Committee), led by Francis Mackey. The RIRA is distinct from the Continuity IRA, another Provisional IRA splinter group founded in 1986, although the two groups have been known to co-operate at a local level. The Provisional IRA has been hostile to the RIRA and issued threats to RIRA members, and in the October of 2000 was alleged to be responsible for the fatal shooting of Belfast RIRA member Joe O’Connor according to O’Connor’s family and 32 County Sovereignty Movement member Marian Price.

The RIRA is an illegal organisation under Irish and UK law (section 11(1) of the Terrorism Act 2000) because of the use of ‘IRA’ in the group’s name. Membership of the organisation is punishable by a sentence of up to ten years imprisonment under UK law. In 2001 the United States government designated the RIRA as a “Foreign Terrorist Organization” (FTO). This makes it illegal for Americans to provide material support to the RIRA, requires American financial institutions to freeze the group’s assets, and denies suspected RIRA members visas into the United States.

Funding

In 2014, Forbes Magazine estimated the group’s annual turnover at $50 million. According to the police in Northern Ireland, the main sources of the Real IRA’s funding are illegal fuel operations and various smuggling activities.

Weaponry

The RIRA initially took small amounts of materiel from Provisional IRA arms dumps under the control of McKevitt and other former Provisional IRA members, including the plastic explosive Semtex, Uzi submachine guns, AK-47 and AK-74 assault rifles, handguns, shotguns, detonators, and timing devices. The defection of senior Provisional IRA members also gave the RIRA the ability to manufacture home-made explosives and improvised mortars, including the Mark 15 mortar capable of firing a 200 lb shell.

In 1999 the organisation supplemented its equipment by importing arms from Croatia, including military explosive TM500, CZ Model 25 submachine guns, modified AK-47 assault rifles with a folding stock, and RPG-18 and RPG-22 rocket launchers. But in the of July 2000 an attempt to smuggle a second consignment of arms was foiled by Croatian police, who seized seven RPG-18s, AK-47 assault rifles, detonators, ammunition, and twenty packs of TM500.

In 2001 RIRA members travelled to Slovakia to procure arms, and were caught in a sting operation by the British security agency MI5. The men attempted to purchase five tonnes of plastic explosives, 2,000 detonators, 500 handguns, 200 rocket-propelled-grenades, and also wire-guided missiles and sniper rifles. Three men from County Louth were arrested and extradited to the UK and subsequently imprisoned for 30 years each after pleading guilty to conspiring to cause explosions and other charges.

In the June of 2006, the PSNI made a number of arrests following an MI5 sting operation targeting a dissident republican gun smuggling plot. The RIRA had attempted to procure arms from France including Semtex and C-4 plastic explosives, SA-7 surface-to-air missiles, AK-47s, rocket launchers, heavy machine guns, sniper rifles, pistols with silencers, anti-tank weapons and detonators. On the 30th of June 2010, two of those arrested were found guilty following a trial by judge in Belfast. On the 1st of October 2010 one man was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for attempting to import weapons and explosives, while the other was sentenced to a term of 4 years imprisonment for making a Portuguese property available for the purpose of terrorism.

 Events of the

Real Irish Republican Army

actions

1998 to 2014

The group was formed in late 1997 by members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army who disagreed with its ceasefire. The Real IRA is the biggest and most active of the “dissident republican” paramilitaries waging a campaign against the British security forces. The other main paramilitaries are the group which calls itself Óglaigh na hÉireann, and the Continuity IRA.

1998

(For some of the incidents in 1998, it is unclear whether the Real IRA, the Continuity IRA, or both organizations were responsible. )

6th January 1998: A 500 lb car bomb was defused by the security forces in the centre of Banbridge, County Down. A telephoned warning had been sent.

20th February 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 500 lb car bomb exploded outside the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) base in Moira, County Down. Seven RUC officers and four civilians were hurt. The blast caused widespread damage.

23rd February 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 300 lb car bomb exploded near the RUC base on Edward Street in Portadown, County Armagh. The blast caused widespread damage but no injuries.

10th March 1998: There was a barrack buster attack on the RUC base on Newry Road in Armagh. Five mortars were launched and three exploded on impact. People were evacuated from the surrounding area after the British Army spotted the launchers, and there were no injuries.

24th March 1998: There were two mortar attacks in South Armagh. Four mortars were fired at Forkill British Army/RUC base; one exploded inside the base but caused no injuries. A further two mortars were fired at a British Army watchtower at Glasdrumman, but fell short of the target. It is believed the RIRA was responsible.

30th April 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 550–600 lb car bomb was defused in the centre of Lisburn. It is believed the RIRA was responsible.

1st May 1998: RIRA member Ronan Mac Lochlainn was shot dead by Gardaí during an attempted robbery of a cash-in-transit van in County Wicklow, Republic of Ireland.

4th May 1998: There was an attempted mortar attack on Grosvenor Road RUC base in Belfast. One of the mortars fell short of the target and the other exploded in its launch tube.

8th May 1998: The RIRA issued a statement declaring war on the United Kingdom.

9th May 1998: There was an attempted mortar attack on the RUC base in Belleek, County Fermanagh. The mortars fell short of the target and one exploded as the RUC was clearing the area. A claim of responsibility was made on behalf of the Real IRA.

16th May 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 500 lb car bomb was defused near the RUC base in Armagh.

23rd June 198: The RIRA is believed to have been responsible for an explosion on a road near Forkill, County Armagh.

13th July 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 635 lb car bomb was defused outside the courthouse in Newry. It is believed the RIRA was responsible.

21st July 1998: A mortar was fired at Corry Square RUC base in Newry, but fell short of the target and did not detonate. The Real IRA claimed responsibility.

28th July 1998: The RIRA was blamed for planting incendiary bombs in shops in Portadown.

1st August 1998: A 500 lb car bomb exploded in the centre of Banbridge, County Down. Telephoned warnings were sent but the bomb exploded before the area was fully evacuated. Two RUC officers and thirty-three civilians were hurt and the blast caused extensive damage. The Real IRA claimed responsibility.

15th August 1998: Omagh bombing: A 500 lb car bomb exploded in the centre of Omagh, County Tyrone. The bomb killed 29 civilians and wounded 220 others. This was the highest death toll from a single attack during the Troubles. Although warnings had been given 38 minutes beforehand, they proved to be insufficient.

18th August 1998: The RIRA announced it was suspending all military operations.

7th September 1998: The RIRA announced a ceasefire.

1999

9th May 1999: A 2007 inquest heard how the RIRA were responsible for the killing of Brendan “Speedy” Fegan in Newry, County Down in 1999. It is believed Fegan was killed by the RIRA as a result of his alleged drug dealing activities.

2000

20th January 2000: The RIRA announced an end to its ceasefire.

25th February: The RIRA is believed to have been responsible for a bomb attack against a British Army barracks in Ballykelly, County Londonderry. The Continuity IRA initially claimed responsibility for the blast but security sources said they believed it was in fact the RIRA who were responsible.

6th April 2000: The RIRA detonated a bomb at Ebrington British Army barracks in Derry. The bomb destroyed an unmanned guardhouse and damaged the perimeter fence.

14th April 2000: The RIRA were blamed for a failed mortar bomb attack on an army base in Roslea, County Fermanagh.

24th May2000: The RIRA were responsible for a mortar bomb attack on a British Army base in the village of Glassdrumman, County Armagh.

1st June 2000: The RIRA detonated a small bomb on Hammersmith Bridge in London, England.

19th June2000: A RIRA bomb was on a railway line at Ealing Broadway in London.

20th June 2000: The RIRA were responsible for a leaving an explosive device in the property of former Northern Ireland Secretary Of State Peter Mandelson in Hillsborough, County Down.

30th June 2000: The RIRA bombed the main Dublin-to-Belfast railway line near Meigh in County Armagh.

9th July 2000: The RIRA detonated a car bomb at Stewartstown RUC station, County Tyrone.

12th September 2000: The RIRA were responsible for planting two 80 lb bombs at Magilligan army base in Derry. Both bombs failed to detonate and were later defused by British Army bomb disposal experts.

13th September 2000: The RIRA were responsible for a mortar bomb attack on an RUC station in Armagh.

13th September 2000:The RIRA were responsible for planting two 80 lb bombs at Magilligan British Army camp in County Londonderry, one of which was planted in a wooden hut and partially exploded when a soldier opened the door to the hut. The second bomb was found during a follow-up search and made safe by bomb disposal experts.

22nd September 2000: The RIRA fired an RPG-22 anti-tank rocket at the headquarters of the Secret Intelligence Service in London.

13th October 2000: A RIRA member, Joseph O’Connor, was shot dead in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. It is believed the Provisional IRA were responsible.

24th September 2000: The RIRA were responsible for detonating a 50 lb bomb on a railway line in Dunmurry, County Antrim.

1st November 2000: A RIRA booby trap bomb hidden in a traffic cone exploded in Castlewellan, County Down, seriously injuring an RUC officer who lost a leg and two fingers.

2001

23rd January 2001: The RIRA were responsible for a mortar attack on Ebrington Barracks in Derry. One mortar landed inside the perimeter fence of the base after being fired from a parked van. No one was injured.

5th February 2001: The RIRA were responsible for a pipe bomb attack in which a couple were injured in Newcastle, County Down. The RIRA would later kill the man, in a gun attack a year later in the February of 2002.

21st February 2001: A RIRA bomb disguised as a torch exploded outside a British Army barracks in Shepherd’s Bush, West London, after a 14 year old army cadet picked it up; the explosion left the cadet completely blind and required the amputation of his left hand.

4th March 2001: The RIRA detonated a car bomb outside BBC headquarters in London, England. (See 4th March 2001 BBC bombing) The explosion was captured by a BBC cameraman and the footage was broadcast on TV stations worldwide, gaining mass publicity for the group.

14th April 2001: The RIRA was blamed for a small bomb explosion at a postal sorting office in Hendon, London, England.

23rd April 2001: The RIRA were blamed for a grenade attack on an RUC station in Derry.

6th May 2001: The RIRA was blamed for a small bomb explosion at a postal sorting office in Hendon, London, England. One man was wounded.

15th May 2001: The RIRA was blamed for a mortar attack on an army base in Bessbrook, County Armagh.

May 27th 2001: The RIRA were responsible for a failed rocket attack on an RUC station in Strabane, County Tyrone. The device contained just over one pound of Semtex.

8th June 2001: The RIRA was blamed for a gun attack at a polling station in Draperstown, County Tyrone. Two RUC officers and a civilian were wounded.

1st August 2001: The RIRA planted a 44 lb car bomb at Belfast International Airport. It was made safe by bomb disposal officers.

3rd August 2001: The RIRA detonated a car bomb in Ealing, west London, England (See 3rd August 2001 Ealing bombing).

22nd August 2001: The RIRA planted a small bomb on a bridge in Derry. The group gave a telephoned warning and the bomb was defused.

1st November: The RIRA were blamed for planting an incendiary device that partially exploded in a shop in Newry, County Down.

3rd November: The RIRA planted a car bomb in the centre of Birmingham, England. It failed to explode properly.

2002

3rd January 2002: The RIRA carried out a pipe bomb attack on a police officer’s home in Annalong, County Down.

26th January 2002: The RIRA were believed to have been responsible for a blast bomb attack during disturbances in north Belfast. Three police officers and two soldiers were injured in the blast.

21st February 2002: The RIRA claimed responsibility for the killing of Matthew Burns in Castlewellan, County Down. It is believed the killing was a result of a personal feud between Burns and the RIRA.

3rd March 2002: Two teenage boys are injured with a RIRA booby trap bomb in Forkhill, County Armagh. The device was hidden inside a traffic cone when it exploded.

29th March 2002: The RIRA targeted a former member of the Royal Irish Regiment in Sion Mills, County Tyrone. A bomb was attached to his car but failed to explode.

13th April 2002: The RIRA were blamed for two bomb attacks on Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) stations in Downpatrick & Ardglass, County Down.

5th June 2002: The RIRA are believed to have been linked to a kidnapping in Ballyhornan, County Down.

17th July 2002: The RIRA claimed responsibility for an attack on a Police Service of Northern Ireland patrol car in Downpatrick, County Down. An explosive device was fired at the car but bounced off and failed to explode.

2nd August 2002: The RIRA was blamed for detonating a bomb at a British Territorial Army base in Derry. A civilian builder was killed in the blast.

20th October 2002: The RIRA claimed responsibility for an attempted bombing of Castlederg PSNI station, County Tyrone. A coffee jar bomb packed with shrapnel was thrown over the perimeter fence but failed to explode.

24th November 2002: The RIRA were believed to have been responsible for an attempted bombing of a motor tax office in Belfast. The operation was intercepted by undercover police and one of the bombers was severely injured after police fired a number of shots. Two men were arrested at the scene.

2003

13th March 2003: The RIRA left a bomb in a van outside Laganside Courthouse in Belfast. It was defused by bomb disposal officers.

5th April 2003: The RIRA claimed it had sent an incendiary bomb to Maghaberry prison. The bomb was defused by the British army.

5th May 2003: The RIRA were responsible for an attempting bombing of a motor tax office in Belfast. The device, which was in a van parked outside the motor tax office in Upper Queen Street, contained three pipe bombs and three fuel containers.

19th June 2003: The RIRA abandoned a 1,200 lb van bomb on the outskirts of Derry. The Device was described as “one of the biggest ever found in the UK”.

17th August 2003: The RIRA killed Danny McGurk, a civilian, in West Belfast. The group later issued a statement offering an apology and saying that the killing was “criminally wrong and detracted from the goal of Irish liberation”.

3rd September 2003: The RIRA were blamed for leaving a roadside bomb near Bryansford, County Down. It was believed to have been meant for a passing PSNI patrol.

21st September 2003: The RIRA were blamed for firing a number of shots near the home of Social Democratic and Labour Party councillor Peter Fitzpatrick in Kilcoo, County Down. Fitzpatrick had recently denounced the group’s actions.

12th October 2003: The RIRA were responsible for an attempted bombing of a PSNI station in Roslea, County Fermanagh. A 130 lb car bomb was defused by the British army.

20th November 2003: The RIRA attempted to ambush PSNI and British Army members in Newcastle, County Down. The group claimed there was a bomb at the empty Enniskeen Hotel. However, this was a hoax meant to draw the police and army towards the real bomb. The time bomb was found and made safe.

2004

4th February 2004: The RIRA claimed responsibility for planting a bomb inside a British Army base at Ballykelly, County Londonderry. It failed to explode.

26th March 2004: Four men were charged with RIRA membership after involvement in a RIRA firebomb attack on a house in Cork, Republic of Ireland.

8th May 2004: The RIRA were responsible for sending packages containing a number of bullets and a sympathy card to elected representatives on Newry & Mourne District Council. The packages were addressed to the District Policing Partnership members at SDLP premises and council offices in Newry, County Down.

8th September 2004: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on Strand Road PSNI station in Derry. No one was injured but builders who were working on an extension in the fortified base had to dive for cover as the gunman opened fire.

30th September 2004: The RIRA were responsible for sending a parcel bomb to an SDLP councillor, Eamonn O’Neill in Castlewellan, County Down.

24th November 2004: The RIRA carried out a firebomb attack on a commercial premises in Belfast.

4th December 2004: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on a PSNI station in Belleek, County Fermanagh.

2005

6th November 2005: The RIRA were blamed for a hoax bomb alert at the Down Royal Racecourse in County Down. The bomb warning disrupted a two-day racing festival in when 9,000 racegoers had to be evacuated.

2006
9th August 2006: The RIRA carried out a number of firebomb attacks on businesses in Newry, County Down. Buildings belonging to JJB Sports and Carpetright were destroyed, and ones belonging to MFI and TK Maxx were badly damaged.

13th August 2006: The RIRA claimed it left two devices on the Belfast–Dublin railway line in south County Armagh, between Newry and Dundalk. The alert caused massive disruption to railway and road traffic in the area.

16th August 2006: The RIRA were blamed for an attempted bombing on the home of an Ulster Unionist Peer, Lord Ballyedmond in County Louth.

8th September 2006: The RIRA were blamed for a hoax bomb threat against a DPP meeting in Downpatrick, County Down.

1st November 2006: The RIRA were responsible for a number of fire bomb attacks on businesses in Belfast. Businesses such as Homebase, Smyths & JJB Sports were badly damaged.

4th December 2006: The RIRA are believed to have been responsible for a failed mortar attack on a PSNI Station in Craigavon, County Armagh.

2007

18th July 2007: The RIRA claimed responsibility for the discovery of two bombs during a security alert in Newry, County Down. One of the devices exploded, while army experts carried out a controlled explosion on the other. It was claimed in a statement that the bombs were intended for use against members of the PSNI.

25th August 2007: The RIRA carried out a gun attack on the home of a former SDLP councillor, Pat Bradley, in Derry.

10th October 2007: An inquest heard how the RIRA were responsible for the murder of Brendan “Speedy” Fegan in Newry, County Down in 1999. It is believed Fegan was killed by the RIRA as a result of his alleged drug dealing activities.

8th November 2007: A PSNI officer was shot and wounded by the RIRA as he sat in his car on Bishop Street, Derry.

12th November 2007: A PSNI officer was shot and wounded by the RIRA in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

16th December 2007: The RIRA were blamed for a pipe bomb attack on a PSNI station in Strabane, County Tyrone.

2008

7th February 2008: The RIRA announced that after a three-year period of reorganisation it was ready to “go back to war”.

14th February 2008: A former RIRA member, Andrew Burns, was killed by a small republican organisation, Óglaigh na hÉireann in the County Donegal village of Doneyloop.

12th May 2008: The RIRA exploded a booby-trap bomb underneath the car of a PSNI officer in Spamount, County Tyrone. The officer was pulled to safety by a passing motorist before the car was engulfed in flames.

9th September 2008: The IMC blamed the RIRA for the discovery of an under vehicle explosive device under the car of a civilian in Lisburn, County Antrim. It is believed the RIRA had mistaken the civilian for a member of the PSNI.

15th September 2008: The IMC blamed the RIRA for the discovery of a 100 lb bomb in Jonesborough, County Armagh.

25th September 2008: A man survived after being shot in the neck by the RIRA on the County Londonderry-County Donegal border. The same man was targeted in a pipe bomb attack on his home on 25th October, the RIRA did not claim responsibility for the attack, but security forces believe they were responsible for it.

19th November 2008: The IMC blamed the RIRA for the discovery of a coffee jar bomb near a PSNI station in Belfast.

19th December 2008: The RIRA claimed to have fired a rocket at police on patrol near Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh. Police immediately warned people to be careful, and carried out a search operation. Nothing was found.

2009

7th March: 2009 Massereene Barracks shooting – The RIRA shot dead two British Army soldiers as they collected a delivery outside Massereene British Army Barracks in County Antrim. Two other soldiers and two civilian deliverymen were also wounded by gunfire.

2nd April 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for carrying out a punishment shooting in Derry against a convicted rapist who was awaiting sentencing for raping a 15-year-old girl.

12th April 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for shooting dead MI5 informant Denis Donaldson on 4th April 2006. Donaldson was shot dead at his cottage near Glenties, County Donegal, Republic of Ireland.

5th July 2009: Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) MP William McCrea was warned of a death threat by the RIRA.

13th July 2009: The RIRA was blamed for shooting at the PSNI in the Ardoyne area of North Belfast during heavy rioting after an Orange Order parade.

28th August 2009: Armed RIRA members staged a roadblock in Meigh, County Armagh. A PSNI patrol in an unmarked patrol vehicle spotted the group, but withdrew fearing that their presence would provoke a gun battle.

29th August 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for the discovery of an improvised explosive near a school in Armagh. The device was defused by the British Army.

5th September 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for an attack on a man with iron bars and a sledge hammer in Strabane, County Tyrone.

17th September 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for targeting an individual with an under vehicle explosive device in Belfast. It is believed the individual was employed by an engineering company with PSNI & Defence contracts.

21st September 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for two pipe-bomb attacks on the homes of family members of a PSNI officer in Derry. One of the devices exploded and destroyed a car.

7th October 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a hoax bomb alert outside a couthouse in Newry, County Down. The alert caused massive disruption for both businesses and traffic in the city.

8th October 2009: RIRA members fired a volley of shots over the coffin of RIRA member John Brady in Strabane, County Tyrone. Brady had died on 5th October in PSNI custody.

10th October 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a hoax bomb alert at a courthouse in Strabane, County Tyrone. Armed and masked men hijacked a taxi in the town, claiming they had left a device in the vehicle and then ordered the driver to abandon the vehicle outside the courthouse. The alert caused massive disruption.

22nd October 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a small explosion at a British Territorial Army base in North Belfast which caused damage to the perimeter fence.

19th November 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for the discovery of a “crude wire mortar type device” in Armagh.

21st November 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for an attempted assassination of a serving PSNI officer in Garrison, County Fermanagh. The operation was intercepted and a number of shots were exchanged between RIRA gunmen and police.

30th November 2009: The IMC blamed the RIRA for failed pipe bomb attack on a PSNI station in Strabane, County Tyrone. The Device which failed to explode was defused by the British army.

31st December 2009: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on Crossmaglen PSNI station, County Armagh.

2010

24th January 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on Crossmaglen PSNI station, County Armagh.

25th January 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for shooting dead a man in Cork, Republic of Ireland. The RIRA claimed he was a drug dealer.

31st January 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on a PSNI station in Bessbrook, County Armagh.

3rd February2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for throwing a pipe bomb at Oldpark PSNI station in Belfast. The device exploded causing damage to a perimeter fence of the station.

22nd February 2010: The RIRA were blamed for detonating a 250 lb car bomb outside a courthouse in Newry, County Down. The bombers issued a code-worded warning that the bomb would explode within 30 minutes, but it exploded 17 minutes later while police were evacuating the area. The courthouse guardhut was heavily damaged.

24th February 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for kidnapping and shooting dead Kieran Doherty. His body was found on the outskirts of Derry, near the County Donegal border. The RIRA said that Doherty was a RIRA member and that he had been killed for drug dealing.

12th March 2010: The PSNI claimed it had intelligence that a Press Officer for Sinn Féin in Derry was under threat from the RIRA.

19th March 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for security alerts in Derry. At least three controlled explosions were carried out on suspect devices which had been left in various locations around the city.

21st March 2010: The RIRA were blamed for a gun attack on PSNI officers dealing with a “suspect device” on the Belfast–Dublin railway line near Newry, County Down. The device was found to be an “elaborate hoax”.

28th March 2010: Four masked and armed men, claiming to be RIRA volunteers, hijacked a van on Coshquin Road in Derry and left it outside “Blackthorn Amusements” in Bridgend, County Donegal. The hijacking sparked a security alert which caused disruption to traffic in the area.

22nd April 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a car bomb attack on a PSNI base in Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. A telephoned warning was given an hour beforehand, but two civilians were hurt.

23rd April 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a pipe bomb attack on a house in Coalisland, County Tyrone. It was claimed that the RIRA accused the occupants of being involved in drug-dealing and criminality.

30th May 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a pipe bomb attack on a house at Windmill Court, Dungannon, County Tyrone. The bomb was thrown through the kitchen window and caused considerable damage.

17th June 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for an attempted van bomb attack on a PSNI station in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone. A telephoned warning was received and the 300 lb bomb was made safe by the British Army.

18th June 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for an attempted pipe bomb attack on a PSNI station in Craigavon, County Armagh. The device was made safe by the British Army.

22nd June 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for an attempted ambush on the Keady–Castleblayney road in County Armagh. Security forces were lured into the area by a fire and a bomb warning. A bomb with a command wire was found and made safe by the British Army.

2nd July 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for a gun attack on a PSNI station in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

10th July 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for exploding a bomb under a small stone bridge on Carrickrovaddy Road near Belleeks, County Armagh.

26th July 2010: The RIRA were blamed for a gun attack on the Players’ Lounge pub on Fairview Strand, Dublin. A lone gunman entered the pub shortly after midnight and fired shots at a doorman. The doorman and two bystanders were wounded.

8th August 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for planting a booby-trap bomb under a PSNI officer’s car in Kilkeel, County Down. It fell off the car and failed to explode.

10th August 2010: The IMC blamed the RIRA for planting a booby-trap bomb under a PSNI worker’s car in Cookstown, County Tyrone. The man worked as a civilian security guard at Cookstown PSNI base. It partially exploded but the man was unhurt.

4th October 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a car bomb outside the Ulster Bank on Culmore Road in Derry. The bomb was more than 200 lb and exploded at 23:56, about an hour after a telephoned warning. Two PSNI officers were lightly hurt and the bank, a hotel and nearby shops were heavily damaged.

15th October 2010: In a statement to the Derry Journal, the RIRA claimed it attempted a sniper attack on a PSNI officer in Derry. It claimed that “the sniping operation was abandoned due to civilian interference”.

20th October 2010: The RIRA claimed responsibility for shooting a man in the legs in Derry. The man was a convicted sex offender.

2011

18th January 2011: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a blast bomb attack on the offices of UK City Of Culture in Derry. The bomb caused minor damaged to the offices.

16th February 2011: The RIRA admitted responsibility for a viable pipe bomb device that was found outside a home in Magherafelt, County Londonderry.

3rd March 2011: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a gun attack on a police patrol in Derry. A number of shots were fired as police investigated a report of a stolen car. Although no one was injured, one shot did hit the police car.

2nd April 2011: PSNI officer Ronan Kerr was killed when a booby-trap bomb exploded under his car in Omagh, County Tyrone. A RIRA-linked group claimed responsibility.

17th May 2011: The RIRA was blamed for planting a pipe bomb on a bus in Maynooth, near Dublin, during Queen Elizabeth II’s visit to the Republic of Ireland.

22th May 2011: The RIRA claimed responsibility for a bomb attack on a bank in Derry. No one was injured.

9th June 2011: The RIRA was blamed for shooting dead a man in Dublin who was “until recently a leading member of the Continuity IRA” and allegedly linked to drug dealing.

24th August 2011: The RIRA was blamed for a booby-trap bomb attack at a house in Navan, County Meath. The target was a man who had worked for the Garda as an informer inside the RIRA and he was wounded in the attack.

16th September 2011: The RIRA was blamed for shooting dead alleged drug gang leader Micheal “The Panda” Kelly in Clongriffin, North Dublin.

13th October 2011: The RIRA claimed responsibility for planting a small bomb outside the UK City of culture offices in Derry. It caused substantial damage to the office and surrounding buildings.

2012

19th January 2012: Bombs exploded outside two government offices in Derry. Telephoned warnings had been sent about an hour beforehand and the areas were evacuated. The RIRA was blamed.

26th July 2012: It was announced that Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD) and a number of small independent republican paramilitary groups were merging with the RIRA.

3rd September 2012: Real IRA member Alan Ryan was shot dead, allegedly by a criminal gang, in Dublin. The Derry 32CSM website released a statement saying he was a republican anti-drug activist and vowed revenge. The RIRA held a paramilitary funeral for Ryan which was attended by masked men in military uniform who fired a volley of shots over the coffin.

28th September 2012: John Wilson, from a family in which some members have been deeply involved in organised crime, was shot dead by the RIRA allegedly in retaliation for the murder of Alan Ryan.

1st November 2012: A Prison Officer was shot dead on the M1 motorway near Craigavon while driving to work. The shots were fired from another car, which drove alongside. He was the first Prison Officer to be killed since 1993. The “IRA” (which the now-defunct Real IRA is a founding faction) claimed responsibility.

4th December: The RIRA was blamed for the shooting dead of Eamon ‘The Godfather’ Kelly in North Dublin as retaliation for the murder of Alan Ryan earlier in the year.

2013

23rd February 2013: Two alleged RIRA members in Cork were prevented from carrying out the assassination of a drug dealer after the van they were traveling in was stopped and searched by Gardaí. Gardaí discovered two loaded handguns and balaclavas.

3rd March 2013: The RIRA were blamed for an attempted mortar attack on a Derry police station. The PSNI stopped a van containing four mortars and the roof partly removed to allow the mortars to be fired. Two men were arrested at the scene, including the van driver and a motorcyclist following the van, while another man was arrested shortly after.

6th March 2013: The RIRA were blamed for shooting dead a man in Gormanston, County Meath. It was allegedly retaliation for the killing of RIRA member Alan Ryan.

8th October 2013: The RIRA shot dead a man in north Belfast, claiming he was a drug dealer. His body was found in a lake in Alexandra Park.

22nd October 2013: The RIRA claimed responsibility for throwing a pipe bomb at a PSNI vehicle in the Bogside area of Derry. The following night, another pipe bomb was thrown at a PSNI vehicle in Newtownabbey.

8th November 2013: A booby-trap bomb was found under the car of a former RUC/PSNI officer in Tullycarnet, east Belfast.

20th November 2013: The RIRA claimed responsibility for an attempted proxy bombing in Derry. A masked gunman placed a bomb on a bus, which had no passengers, and told the driver to drive to Strand Road PSNI base. However, the driver abandoned the bus and the bomb was made safe.

5th-6th December 2013: A convoy of three PSNI vehicles was hit by automatic gunfire on Crumlin Road, Belfast. The attackers had fired from a makeshift platform on Herbert Street. The following night, a PSNI landrover was hit by gunfire on Suffolk Road.

23rd December 2013: The RIRA was believed to have been responsible for firing shots at Lisnaskea PSNI base.

2014

11th-13th February 2014: The RIRA claimed responsibility for sending letter bombs to British Army recruitment offices in south-east England. They were sent to offices in Oxford, Reading, Slough, Brighton, Aldershot, Canterbury and Chatham.

6th-7th March 2014: The RIRA claimed responsibility for sending two letter bombs to senior prison staff at Maghaberry Prison. It claimed that republican prisoners there were suffering degrading treatment. The letters were intercepted at sorting offices.

14th March 2014: A PSNI landrover was hit by a horizontal mortar on Falls Road, Belfast. The mortar launcher was attached to railings at Belfast City Cemetery and detonated by command wire. A civilian car was also hit by debris, but there were no injuries. The RIRA claimed responsibility.

29th May 2014: A large firebomb exploded in the reception of the Everglades Hotel in Derry, causing extensive damage. It had been left by a masked man who gave a forty-minute warning. The hotel had hosted a PSNI recruitment event and was due to host another.

30th July 2014: A PSNI landrover was struck by gunfire in the Bogside area of Derry.

7th October 2014: A pipe bomb was thrown at a PSNI mobile patrol on Crumlin Road, North Belfast. It failed to explode and was made safe by ATOs, who described it as highly sophisticated.

14th-23rd October 2014: There were two attempts to kill PSNI officers with booby-trap bombs; one in the Ballyarnett area of Derry and another in the Ballycolman area of Strabane.

2nd November 2014: A PSNI armoured jeep was hit by a horizontal mortar in the Creggan area of Derry. A rear door was blown off and a passing car was damaged, but there were no injuries. The RIRA said it had fired an “EFP mortar-style device triggered by a command wire”. In the security operation that followed, youths attacked the PSNI with stones and petrol bombs.

Sourced from Wikepidia

Spandau Prison

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Apr 022015
 

Spandau Prison

Spandau Prison

Many Green Jackets would have done a guard at Spandau Prison it was located in the borough of Spandau in western Berlin. It was constructed in 1876 and demolished in 1987 after the death of its last prisoner, Rudolf Hess, to prevent it from becoming a neo-Nazi shrine. The site was later rebuilt as a shopping centre for the British forces stationed in Germany.

History

In history, Spandau Prison succeeded as a prison to the Renaissance-era Spandau Citadel where Frederick II of Prussia had held captive the magistrates of the Prussian Kammergericht and the Spandau jail, where Carl Schurz had freed his friend Gottfried Kinkel in the aftermath of the 1848 German revolution. The magistrates and Kinkel were held captive as Festungsgefangene (fortress prisoners), being privileged in detainment conditions.

The prison was built in 1876 on Wilhelmstraße. It initially served as a military detention center. From 1919 it was also used for civilian inmates. It held up to 600 inmates at that time.

In the aftermath of the Reichstag Fire of 1933, opponents of Hitler and journalists such as Egon Kisch and Carl von Ossietzky were held there in so-called protective custody. Spandau Prison became a sort of predecessor of the Nazi concentration camps. While it was formally operated by the Prussian Ministry of Justice, the Gestapo tortured and abused its inmates, as Egon Erwin Kisch recalls in his memories of Spandau Prison. By the end of 1933 the first Nazi concentration camps had been erected (at Dachau, Osthofen, Oranienburg, Sonnenburg, Lichtenburg and the marshland camps around Esterwegen); all remaining prisoners who had been held in so-called protective custody in state prisons were transferred to these concentration camps.

After World War II it was operated by the Four-Power Authorities to house the Nazi war criminals sentenced to imprisonment at the Nuremberg Trials.

Only seven prisoners were finally imprisoned there. Arriving from Nuremberg on the 18th of July 1947, they were:

Konstantin von Neurath  number (3)

Sentenced to 15 years

Released on the 6th November 1954

Released early

Born on 2nd February 1873

Died on 14th August 1956 (aged 83).

Erich Raeder  number (2)

Sentenced to Life

Released on the 26th September 1955

Released early

Born on 24th April 1876

Died on 6th November 1960  (aged 84).

Karl Dönitz  number (4)

Sentenced to 10 years

Released on the 30th September 1956

Born on 16th September 1891

Died on 24th December 1980 (aged 89).

Walther Funk  number (6)

Sentenced to Life

Released on the 16th May 1957

Released early

Born on 18th August 1890

Died on 31st May 1960 (aged 69).

Albert Speer  number (5)

Sentenced to 20 years

Released on the 30th September 1966

Born on the 19th March 1905

Died on 1st September 1981 (aged 76).

Baldur von Schirach  number (1)

Sentenced to 20 years

Released on the 30th September 1966

Born on the 9th May 1907

Died on 8th August 1974 (aged 67).

Rudolf Hess  number (7)

Sentenced to Life

17th August 1987 (Hess died in Prison)

died in prison

Born on the 26th April 1894

Died on 17th August 1987 (aged 93)

Of the seven, only three (Rudolf Hess took his own life) fully served their sentences before being released; the remaining three, Neurath, Raeder, and Funk, were released earlier due to ill health. Between 1966 and 1987, Rudolf Hess was the only inmate in Spandau Prison. His only companion was the warden, Eugene K. Bird, who became a close friend. Bird wrote a book about Hess’s imprisonment entitled The Loneliest Man in the World.

Spandau was one of only two Four-Power organizations to continue to operate after the breakdown of the Allied Control Council; the other was the Berlin Air Safety Center. The four occupying powers of Berlin alternated control of the prison on a monthly basis, each having the responsibility for a total of three months out of the year. Observing the Four-Power flags that flew at the Allied Control Authority building could determine who controlled the prison.

The prison was demolished in the year 1987, largely to prevent it from becoming a Neo-Nazi shrine, after the death of its final remaining prisoner, Rudolf Hess, who had been the prison’s sole occupant after the release of Speer and von Schirach in 1966. To further ensure its erasure, the site was made into a parking facility and a NAAFI shopping center, named The Britannia Centre Spandau and nicknamed Hessco’s after a British supermarket chain of a similar name. All materials from the demolished prison were ground to powder and dispersed in the North Sea or buried at the former RAF Gatow airbase. In 2013 a single brick turned up on the BBC programme Antiques Roadshow.

As of 2006, a Kaiser’s Supermarket, ALDI, and a Media Markt consumer electronics store occupied the former prison grounds. In late 2008, Media Markt left the main shopping complex. The space lies now abandoned. In 2011 the new owner, a development company applied for permission to demolish the cinema complex of the Britannia Centre, which is used by ALDI. The contracts for both, the cinema complex and the shopping complex, with Kaiser’s, were terminated.

The prison

The prison, initially designed for a population in the hundreds, was an old brick building enclosed by one wall 4.5 m (15 ft.) high, another of 9 m (30 ft.), a 3 m (10 ft.) high wall topped with electrified wire, followed by a wall of barbed wire. In addition, some of the sixty soldiers on guard duty manned 6 machine-gun armed guard’s towers 24 hours a day. Due to the number of cells available, an empty cell was left between the prisoners’ cells, to avoid the possibility of prisoners’ communicating in Morse code. Other remaining cells in the wing were designated for other purposes, with one being used for the prison library and another for a chapel. The cells were approximately 3 metres (3¼ yards) long by 2.7 metres (3 yards) wide and 4 metres (13 feet) high.

Garden

The highlight of the prison, from the inmates’ perspective, was the garden. Very spacious given the small number of prisoners using it, the garden space was initially divided into small personal plots that were used by each prisoner in various ways, usually for the growing of vegetables. Dönitz favoured growing beans, Funk tomatoes and Speer flowers, although the Soviet director subsequently banned flowers for a time. By regulation, all of the produce was to be put toward use in the prison kitchen, but prisoners and guards alike often skirted this rule and indulged in the garden’s offerings. As prison regulations slackened and as prisoners became either apathetic or too ill to maintain their plots, the garden was consolidated into one large workable area. This suited the former architect Speer, who, being one of the youngest and liveliest of the inmates, later took up the task of refashioning the entire plot of land into a large complex garden, complete with paths, rock gardens and floral displays. On days without access to the garden, for instance when it was raining, the prisoners occupied their time making envelopes together in the main corridor.

Controversy

The Allied powers originally requisitioned the prison in November 1946, expecting it to accommodate a hundred or more war criminals. Besides the sixty or so soldiers on duty in or around the prison at any given time, there were teams of professional civilian warders from each of the four countries, four prison directors and their deputies, four army medical officers, cooks, translators, waiters, porters and others. This was perceived as a drastic misallocation of resources and became a serious point of contention among the prison directors, politicians from their respective countries, and especially, the West Berlin government, who were left to foot the Spandau bill yet suffered a lack of space in their own prison system. The debate surrounding the imprisonment of the seven war criminals in such a large space, with such a numerous and expensive complementary staff, was only heightened as time went on and prisoners were released. Acrimony reached its peak after the release of Speer and Schirach in 1966, leaving only one inmate, Hess, remaining in an otherwise under-utilized prison. Various proposals were made to remedy this situation, ranging from moving the prisoners to an appropriately sized wing of another larger, occupied prison, to releasing them; house arrest was also considered. Nevertheless, the prison remained exclusively for the seven war criminals for the remainder of its existence.

Prison regulations

Every facet of life in the prison was strictly set out by an intricate prison regulation scheme designed before the prisoners’ arrival by the Four Powers — France, Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States. Compared with other established prison regulations at the time, Spandau’s rules were quite strict. The prisoners’ outgoing letters to families were at first limited to one page every month, talking with fellow prisoners was prohibited, newspapers were banned, diaries and memoirs were forbidden, visits by families were limited to one of fifteen minutes every two months, and lights were flashed into the prisoners’ cells every fifteen minutes during the night as a form of suicide watch. A considerable portion of the stricter regulations was either later revised toward the more lenient, or deliberately ignored by prison staff.

The directors and guards of the Western powers (France, Britain and the United States), repeatedly voiced opposition to many of the stricter measures and made near-constant protest about them to their superiors throughout the prison’s existence, but they were invariably vetoed by the Soviet Union, which favored a tougher approach. The Soviet Union, which suffered 19 million civilian deaths during the war and had pressed at the Nuremberg trials for the execution of all the current inmates, was unwilling to compromise with the Western powers in this regard, both because of the harsher punishment that they felt was justified, and to stress the Communist propaganda line that the capitalist powers had supposedly never been serious about denazification. This contrasted with Werl Prison, which housed hundreds of former officers and other lower-ranking Nazi men who were under a comparatively lax regime. Western commentators accused the Russians of keeping Spandau prison in operation chiefly as a centre for Soviet espionage operations.

Daily life

Every day, prisoners were ordered to rise at 06:00 hours, wash, clean their cells and the corridor together, eat breakfast, stay in the garden until lunch-time at noon (weather permitting), have a post-lunch rest in their cells, then return to the garden. Supper followed at 17:00 hours, after which the prisoners were returned to their cells. Lights out was at 22:00 hours. Prisoners received a shave and a haircut, if necessary, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday; they did their own laundry every Monday. This routine, except the time allowed in the garden, changed very little throughout the years, although each of the controlling nations made their own interpretation of the prison regulations.

Within a few years of their arrival at the prison, all sorts of illicit lines of communication with the outside world were opened for the inmates by sympathetic staff. These supplementary lines were free of the censorship placed on authorised communications, and were also virtually unlimited in volume. Every piece of paper given to the prisoners was recorded and tracked, so secret letters were most often written on toilet paper, whose supply went unmonitored for the entire duration of the prison’s existence. Many inmates took full advantage of this illegal privilege. Albert Speer, after having his official request to write his memoirs denied, finally began setting down his experiences and perspectives of his time with the Nazi regime, which were smuggled out and later released as a bestselling book, Inside the Third Reich. Dönitz wrote letters to his former deputy regarding the protection of his prestige in the outside world. When his release was near, he gave instructions to his wife on how best she could help ease his transition back into politics, which he intended, but never actually accomplished. Walther Funk managed to obtain a seemingly constant supply of cognac (all alcohol was banned) and other treats that he would share with other prisoners on special occasions.

All prisoners feared the month during which the Soviets took command; the Russians were much stricter in their enforcement of prison regulations and offered poorer quality meals. Each nation in charge would bring its own cook and, in the American, French, and British months, feed the prisoners better than regulations allowed. The Soviets would offer an unchanging diet of coffee, bread, soup, and potatoes. This rigidity was primarily due to the much-loathed Soviet director, who perpetually enforced these measures and whom Russian and Western guards alike feared and despised. Until this director’s sudden removal in the early 1960s, the ‘Soviet month’ was dreaded. Afterward, matters, including diet, were improved.

The Spandau Seven

The prisoners, still subject to the petty personal rivalries and battles for prestige that characterized Nazi party politics, divided themselves into groups: Albert Speer and Rudolf Hess were the loners, generally disliked by the others — the former for his admission of guilt and repudiation of Hitler at the Nuremberg trials, the latter for his antisocial personality and perceived mental instability. The two former Grand Admirals, Erich Raeder and Karl Dönitz, stayed together, despite their heated mutual dislike. This situation had come about when Dönitz replaced Raeder as Commander in Chief of the German navy in 1943. Baldur von Schirach and Walther Funk were described as “inseparable”. Konstantin von Neurath was, being a former diplomat, amiable and amenable to all the others.

Despite the length of time they spent with each other, remarkably little progress was made in the way of reconciliation. A notable example was Dönitz’s dislike of Speer being steadfastly maintained for his entire ten-year sentence, with it only coming to a head during the last few days of his imprisonment. Dönitz always believed that Hitler had named him as his successor due to Speer’s recommendation, which had led to Dönitz being tried at Nuremberg (Speer always denied this). There is a collection of medical reports on Baldur von Schirach, Albert Speer, and Rudolf Hess during their confinement at Spandau.

Albert Speer

The prisoners were assigned numbers corresponding to the order in which they were first assigned cells and were, by regulation, referred to by their number only. Speer, number five, was the most ambitious of the prisoners, dedicating himself to a rigorous physical and mental work regime, then scheduling “vacations” of two weeks in length every few months where he relieved himself from his self-imposed routine. He secretly wrote two books, a draft of his memoirs entitled Inside the Third Reich and a collection of diary entries, Spandau: The Secret Diaries. Speer also kept busy with architectural works, designing a Californian summer home for a guard. He would frequently go on “walking tours of the world” by ordering geography and travel books from the local library and walking laps in the prison garden visualizing his journey. Meticulously calculated, he “travelled” more than 24,000 km before his release.

Erich Raeder and Karl Dönitz

“The Admiralty”, as the other prisoners referred to Dönitz and Raeder, were often teamed together for various tasks. Raeder, with a liking for rigid systems and organization, designated himself as chief librarian of the prison library, with Dönitz as his assistant. Both men often withheld themselves from the other prisoners, with Dönitz claiming for his entire ten years in prison that he was still the rightful head of the German state, and Raeder having contempt for the insolence and lack of discipline endemic in his nonmilitary prison-mates. Despite preferring to stay together, the two of them continued their wartime feud and argued most of the time over whether Raeder’s Battleships or Dönitz’s U-boats were responsible for “losing” the war. After Dönitz’s release in 1956 he wrote two books, one on his early life, My Ever-Changing Life, and one on his time as an admiral, Ten Years and Twenty Days. Raeder, in failing health and seemingly close to death, he was released in 1955 and died in 1960.

Rudolf Hess

Rudolf Hess, sentenced to life but not released due to ill health like Raeder, Funk, or Neurath, served the longest sentence out of the seven and was by far the most demanding of the prisoners. Regarded as being the ‘laziest man in Spandau’, Hess avoided all forms of work that he deemed below his dignity, such as pulling weeds. He was the only one of the seven who almost never attended the prison’s Sunday church service. A paranoid hypochondriac, he repeatedly complained of all forms of illness, mostly stomach pains, and was suspicious of all food given to him, always taking the dish placed farthest away from him as a means of avoiding being poisoned. His stomach pains often caused wild and excessive moans and cries of pain throughout the day and night and their authenticity was repeatedly the subject of debate between the prisoners and the prison directors.

Raeder, Dönitz, and Schirach were contemptuous of this behaviour and viewed them as cries for attention or as means to avoid work. Speer and Funk, acutely aware of the likely psychosomatic nature of the illness, were more accommodating to Hess. Speer, in a move that invoked the ire of his fellow prisoners, would often tend to Hess’ needs, bringing him his coat when he was cold and coming to his defence when a director or guard was attempting to coax Hess out of bed and into work. Hess occasionally wailed in pain at night, affecting the sleep of the other prisoners. The prison’s medical officer would inject Hess with what was described as a “sedative” but was in reality distilled water and succeeded in putting Hess to sleep. The fact that Hess repeatedly shirked duties the others had to bear and received other preferential treatment because of his illness, irked the other prisoners and earned him the title of “His imprisoned Lordship” by the admirals.

Hess was also unique among the prisoners in that, as a matter of dignity, he refused all visitors for more than twenty years, finally consenting to see his long-since adult son and wife in 1969 after suffering from a perforated ulcer that required his treatment at a hospital outside the prison. Fearing for his mental health, now that he was the sole remaining inmate, and that his death was imminent, the prison directors agreed to slacken most of the remaining regulations, moving Hess to the more spacious former chapel space, giving him a water heater to allow the making of tea or coffee when he liked, and permanently unlocking his cell so that he could freely have access to the prison’s bathing facilities and library.

Hess was frequently moved from room to room every night for security reasons. He was often taken to BMH (British Military Hospital) not far from Spandau prison where the entire second floor of the hospital was blocked off for him. He continued to be under heavy guard while in hospital. Ward security was provided by soldiers including Royal Military Police (RMP) Close Protection personnel. External security was provided by one of the British infantry battalions then stationed in Berlin. On some unusual occasions, the Russians relaxed their strict regulations; during these times Hess was allowed to spend extra time in the prison garden, and one of the warders from the superpowers took Hess outside the prison for a stroll and sometimes to have dinner.

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Northern Ireland Part Six (1999 –2013)

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Apr 022015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

1999 to 2013

1999

27th January 1999: Former IRA volunteer and RUC informant Eamon Collins was killed near Newry, shortly after testifying against Thomas “Slab” Murphy, leader of the South Armagh Brigade in a libel case with the Sunday Times. Mr. Collins was badly beaten and had a spike pushed through his face.

9th May 1999: Brendan Fegan, a convicted drug dealer and believed to be one of the most prominent drug dealers in Northern Ireland, was shot dead by the IRA in Newry.

13th June 1999: Paul Downey, regarded as one of the most prominent drug dealers in Newry, was kidnapped from a hotel in Newry by an IRA unit, he was then shot in the head and his lifeless body dumped near Beleek.

17th June 1999: British agent Martin McGartland was shot seven times at close range by the IRA while at his home in Tyneside, England. He survived despite serious injuries.

30th July 1999: Charles Bennett was shot in a punishment attack outside a GAA club in west Belfast. He died of his injuries a short time later. The IRA is believed to have been responsible.It is believed he was suspected of stealing IRA weapons.
2000
16th March 2000: An IRA engineer defused a bomb left outside the offices of dissident republican group Republican Sinn Féin on the Falls Road, Belfast. Tom Hartley, Sinn Féin councillor for the area, said “the discovery and defusing of this device has undoubtedly saved lives.´´

April 2000: An IRA active service unit was intercepted by police in Dublin and two members were arrested. The unit is believed to have been on its way to kill notorious Dublin criminal and drug lord Martin Foley.

30th April 2000: Thomas Byrne was allegedly shot dead by the IRA in central Dublin.

29th May 2000: A suspected drug dealer was shot dead in Dunmurry, County Antrim. Police blamed the IRA for the shooting.

29th September 2000: A suspected drug dealer was shot dead in a bar in Magherafelt shortly after the IRA had ordered him to leave the area.

13th October 2000: A Real IRA member, Joseph O’Connor, was shot dead while sitting in his car in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. The Provisional IRA are believed to have been responsible.

2001

7th January 2001: The IRA was blamed for carrying out a punishment beating on a convicted criminal in Ballymurphy, Belfast.

21st April 2001: A major drug dealer was shot dead near his Derry home by four gunmen. It is believed that the IRA was responsible.

14th July 2001: Gangland figure Seamus “Shavo” Hogan a close associate of Martin Cahill was gunned down in Crumlin, Dublin. It is claimed that the IRA is responsible.

2002

8th September 2002: The IRA was blamed for carrying out a punishment beating on a 20-year-old South Armagh man.

11th October 2002: A five man IRA unit was captured by Gardaí in Bray, County Wicklow. It is believed the unit, members of the Dublin Brigade, were on their way to carry out an armed hijacking. The men were in a small van and dressed in Garda uniforms, they also had stun-guns and CS gas.

2003

13th January 2003: The IRA were blamed for punishment attack on a leading member of the Continuity IRA in Downpatrick, County Down.

12th March 2003: IRA member, Keith Rogers, was shot dead in South Armagh during a shootout involving a number of feuding IRA members. The IRA admitted Rogers was a member but claimed he had been shot confronting local criminals.

11th October 2003: The IRA were allegedly responsible for the kidnapping of dissident republican, Brendan Rice, in Newcastle, County Down.

2004

19th January 2004: A dissident republican who was shot in the ankles in a punishment shooting blamed the Provisional IRA for the attack. The man from west Belfast was a member of an organisation which provided support to the families of imprisoned Real IRA (RIRA) members .

20th February 2004: The IRA were accused of being responsible for the kidnap and attempted murder of ex-Irish National Liberation Army member Bobby Tohill. The van in which he was being transported was rammed by police and four men were arrested. The IRA stated that it had not authorised any action against the man in question. Mr. Tohill required 93 stitches following the ordeal and has since gone into hiding.

5th September 2004: The IRA is believed to have been responsible for a fire-bomb attack on a fuel depot in south Belfast.

2005

30th January 2005: Robert McCartney is stabbed to death in a fight with IRA members being involved. Initially Sinn Féin denied IRA involvement but later it suspended 7 Sinn Féin members who had been present and the IRA also cleared witnesses to co-operate with the police investigation. McCartney’s family claim they have been intimidated by the IRA.

2nd February 2005: The IRA issued a statement summarizing their “ambitious initiatives designed to develop or save the peace process”, including three occasions in which they had complied with the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning in putting weapons beyond use. The statement went on to say, “At this time it appears that the two governments are intent on changing the basis of the peace process. They claim that ‘the obstacle now to a lasting and durable settlement… is the continuing terrorist and criminal activity of the IRA’. We reject this. It also belies the fact that a possible agreement last December was squandered by both governments pandering to rejectionist unionism instead of upholding their own commitments and honouring their own obligations.” The statement concluded with two points: “We are taking all our proposals off the table” and”It is our intention to closely monitor ongoing developments and to protect to the best of our ability the rights of republicans and our support base”.

3rd February 2005: Following statements from the British and Irish governments, claiming that the new IRA statement was no cause for alarm, the IRA issues a second two-sentence statement: “The two governments are trying to play down the importance of our statement because they are making a mess of the peace process. Do not underestimate the seriousness of the situation”.

10th February 2005: The Independent Monitoring Commission reports that it firmly supports the Police Service of Northern Ireland and Garda assessments that the PIRA was responsible for the Northern Bank robbery and recommends financial and political sanctions against Sinn Féin.

6th April 2005: Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams calls on the IRA to initiate consultations “as quickly as possible” to move from being a paramilitary organisation to one committed to purely non-military methods.

12th April 2005: A Dublin man, Joseph Rafferty, was shot and killed in a shotgun attack in west Dublin. The IMC and the family of the deceased have claimed that the IRA were responsible. The IRA has denied any involvement.

In May 2005: The IRA is believed to have been responsible for intimidating a family to leave their home in Belfast.

24th May 2005: The Independent Monitoring Commission claimed the IRA were still recruiting and training new members, and it was still involved in paramilitary and criminal activity.

In July 2005: The IMC blamed the IRA for a punishment shooting of an alleged criminal in early July.

28th  July 2005: The IRA release a statement that it is ending its armed campaign and will verifiably put its arms beyond use.

26th September 2005: International weapons inspectors issue a statement confirming the full decommissioning of the IRA’s weaponry.

2006

IRA Colour Party in Dublin – 2009

1st February 2006: International weapons inspectors believe that not all arms were decommissioned on the day the IRA decommissioned. Claims began to circulate that the IRA held onto handguns and various other weapons.

10th March 2006: The IMC claimed that members of the IRA were responsible for the hijacking of a lorry containing a consignment of spirits in County Meath.

2008

31st July 2008: The 32 County Sovereignty Movement (often considered the political arm of the Real IRA), accused the IRA of assaulting one of their members in Derry, leaving the man with serious head and facial injuries.

2010

9th February 2010: A representative of the IRA using the pseudonym “P. O’Neill” issued a statement confirming that Belfast man Joe Lynksey was “executed” by the organisation in 1972. The statement said that the man had been an IRA member and was “court-martialled for breaches of IRA standing orders” and “was subsequently executed and buried in an unmarked grave.” The statement went on to say that Lynskey had an affair with the wife of a Belfast republican and had ordered another IRA member to shoot the man. The IRA said it had not identified Lynskey’s grave.

In March 2010: Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) MLA for Newry & Armagh, Dominic Bradley, claimed that the IRA were responsible for a recent punishment shooting in the town of Meigh and an armed robbery in Armagh during which shots were fired.

In August 2010: The 32 County Sovereignty Movement, the Republican Network for Unity and the UPRG, claimed that the IRA were responsible for a shooting incident in the Gobnascale area of Derry. It is claimed that up to 20 masked men, some armed with handguns, attacked a group of teenagers who were engaging in anti-social behaviour at an interface area. A number of the teenagers were attacked and shots were fired into the air. The men are then reported to have removed their masks when the PSNI arrived and were subsequently identified as members of the Republican Movement. Sinn Féin denied the IRA were involved.

2011

20th June 2011: Jim Wilson and a number of other members of the unionist community claimed that the Provisional IRA was responsible for shooting two loyalist rioters in the legs during a UVF-led attack on the nationalist Short Strand area of Belfast. Alex Maskey denied that the IRA were responsible for the shooting.

2nd July 2011: An alleged member of the Provisional IRA was arrested for questioning over the stabbing of a man suspected of being linked to dissident republicans in the Markets area of Belfast.

2012

16th August 2012: Three men and two women were charged with Provisional IRA membership in Belfast.

2013

14th February 2013: Well-known republican and former IRA Volunteer Seán Kelly was arrested over the punishment shooting of an 18-year-old man in Belfast. He was later released unconditionally. Jim Allister suggested the IRA was involved in the shooting while the Ulster Unionist Party claimed the PSNI had come under pressure to distance mainstream republicans from the attack.

1st March 2013: Seán Hughes, a suspected member of the IRA Army Council, was charged with IRA membership, speaking at a meeting and encouraging support for an illegal organisation.

26th August 2013: It is alleged that the IRA were responsible for planting two mortars along the border in south Armagh. Gardaí claimed the primed devices were intended as a warning by the IRA to the PSNI to cease disrupting the Provisional IRA’s smuggling and diesel laundering business along the border.

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Northern Ireland Part Four (1988–1992)

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Mar 292015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

1988 to 1992

1988

4th January 1988: A British soldier was shot and injured by an IRA sniper during an attack on Woodbourne RUC/British Army barracks in Belfast.

9th January 1988: The IRA detonated a 500 lb (230 kg) car-bomb outside Belfast Law Courts on Chichester Street. A warning was given and there were no injuries.

15th January 1988: A UDR soldier was shot and fatally wounded by the IRA in Coalisland, County Tyrone. Three IRA volunteers had cut holes in a hedge outside his home to make firing positions and as he drove past his car was hit by over 20 rounds fired from two AK-47 assault rifles. He died a day later.

23rd January 1988: An RUC officer was injured after an RUC patrol came under gun and grenade assault on the Culmore Road.

25th January 1988: One RUC officer was killed and others were badly injured after an IRA unit launched two drogue bombs at their armoured patrol in Mulholland Terrace in West Belfast. The RUC said this was the first time an officer had been killed by a “drogue bomb/impact grenade”. A British Army bomb disposal officer described the devices as “devastating”.

26th January 1988: The IRA detonated a 500 lb (230 kg) car-bomb at Dunmurry RUC barracks. The bomb caused extensive damage to the building. A warning was given and there were no injuries.

30th January 1988: An alleged rapist was shot and injured by the IRA in a punishment attack in the Twinbrook area of Belfast.

4th February 1988: An IRA active service unit in Derry engaged a joint British army and RUC checkpoint on the Foyle Bridge. Over 70 rounds were fired before the unit withdrew.

10th February 1988: An IRA grenade attack on a British army observation post on North Howard Street in West Belfast injured two British soldiers.

15th February 1988: A UDR soldier was shot dead by a unit of the IRA’s South Down Command at his home in Kilkeel, County Down. The soldier was also a member of the Young Unionists.

19th February 1988: Two RUC officers were injured (one seriously) when an IRA active service unit launched a grenade at an RUC armoured car on Main Street in Coalisland.

24th February 1988: Two UDR soldiers were killed and two injured when an active service unit from the IRA’s Belfast Brigade detonated a 250 lb (110 kg) bomb at the Royal Avenue security gate in Belfast. One land rover was ripped apart by the explosion. A second device, intended for the Army response unit, was defused. Both of the dead soldiers were also members of the Orange Order.

26th February 1988: An IRA unit launched two mortars at North Howard Street British army base. The mortars exploded in mid-air.

28th February 1988: Two members of the RUC were injured when the IRA launched two grenades at an RUC patrol in Strabane.

29th February 1988: A British soldier and an RUC officer were injured when they triggered an anti-personnel mine which had been planted by the IRA in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

29th February 1988: Two IRA volunteers, Brendan Burns and Brendan Moley of the IRA’s South Armagh Brigade died when bombs they were transporting exploded prematurely during a raid on a British army base.

3rd March 1988: Two IRA units attacked Musgrave Street RUC barracks with Rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles. The base was damaged but there were no injuries.

6th March 1988: Operation Flavius: Three unarmed IRA volunteers, Daniel McCann, Sean Savage and Mairead Farrell, were killed by the SAS in Gibraltar, as they were planning an attack on a public military parade. Although initial reports claimed the three had been shot dead when about to set off a massive car bomb, within 24 hours the Foreign Secretary, Geoffrey Howe, was forced to admit this was not the case. However, a car used by the three was found in Marbella two days after the killings containing140 lb (64 kg) of Semtex, timed to go off during the changing of the guard.

8th March 1988: A British patrol came under heavy fire from an IRA unit at the Poleglass Roundabout in West Belfast.

14th March 1988: An IRA volunteer was killed in a gun battle with British forces in the Turf Lodge are of West Belfast.

16th March 1988: Milltown Cemetery attack: At the funeral of the three IRA volunteers killed in Gibraltar, Michael Stone, a member of the Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF), launched hand grenades during the graveside oration, killing three people and injuring over 50 injured; including a 10 year old boy who was shot in the back, a 72 year old grandmother and a pregnant mother of four who was wounded by shrapnel. One of those killed was IRA volunteer Caoimhin MacBradaigh who had attempted to disarm the gunman.

18th March 1988: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA while sitting in a car in Tonaghgorm, near Belleek. Over 30 shots were fired into the vehicle. The IRA said the intended target was a close family friend who was a British soldier and subsequently announced that it had disbanded the unit which had carried out the attack. There is also speculation that this unit had been responsible for the Enniskillen bombing.

19th March 1988: Corporals killings: During the funeral of IRA volunteer Caoimhin MacBradaigh, killed in the cemetery attack by Michael Stone, a car approached the funeral procession at high speed. The car was surrounded by mourners, and two men later identified as corporals in the British Army were overpowered, dragged from the car, stripped and searched, taken to waste ground and shot and stabbed to death by the IRA.

21st March 1988: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA gun attack on a vehicle checkpoint in the Creggan area of Derry. He was shot in the head after an IRA unit fired two bursts of gunfire from a nearby building which they had taken over sometime earlier. A nearby civilian was hit in the leg by a stray bullet.

6th April 1988: A UDR soldier was killed when he detonated a booby trap bomb which had been attached to his car by an IRA active service unit in Fermanagh.

7th April 1988: A British soldier and an RUC officer were injured during a large IRA operation in Clogher, County Tyrone. IRA units took control of the town before launching simultaneous assaults on the RUC and UDR barracks. A UDR Major was shot and injured as was an RUC officer.

18th April 1988: A civilian who worked as a laborer for the British army was injured when he triggered a booby trap bomb which had been attached to his car by an IRA unit in Ballyronan, East Tyrone.

18th April 1988: Two British soldiers were injured when an IRA unit detonated a 5 lb (2.3 kg) mine by remote control as a patrol passed in Dungannon.

26th April: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA attacks. One UDR soldier was killed in a gun attack near Moortown in County Tyrone. He was shot at close range by IRA volunteers using assault rifles. After he fell to the ground they fired more shots into him. Another British soldier was killed and two injured when the IRA detonated a remote control bomb in Carrickmore. The British patrol had passed a small shop in the village when the bomb exploded. It is believed the IRA switched a gas cylinder which always sat outside the shop for one packed with40 lb (18 kg) explosives.

1st May 1988: Three British soldiers, all members of the Royal Air Force, were killed and four others were wounded when the IRA launched separate attacks in the Netherlands. In the first attack an IRA unit opened fire on a car carrying British soldiers near Roermond, killing one and injuring three. In the second attack, two British soldiers were killed when they triggered a booby trap bomb attached to their car in Nieuw-Bergen.

6th May 1988: IRA volunteer Hugh Hehir was killed by the Garda Special Branch following a bank raid in County Clare.

11th May 1988: Craigavon RUC barracks came under grenade and gun assault from the IRA shortly after 9:20am. The base was damaged but there were no injuries.

12th May 1988: A British soldier, of the Royal Pioneer Corps dog unit, and his Labrador dog were killed when they triggered an IRA anti-personnel device on the Castleblaney Road. The IRA had partly hidden a massive landmine at the side of the road so that it would be discovered by the British Army. When the bomb disposal team arrived they defused the device and a follow-up search was carried out. The IRA had placed a pressure plate bomb nearby and it exploded when the soldier stepped on it during the follow-up operation.

13th May 1988: Two British soldiers were badly wounded when the IRA detonated an anti-personnel mine as their patrol passed on North Howard Street, Belfast.

16th May 1988: A UDR soldier was badly injured when a booby trap bomb concealed in a creamery can exploded at Bantry, near Dungannon.

19th May 1988: Seven RUC officers were injured in an IRA bomb attack during the Balmoral Show in Belfast.

24th May 1988: An IRA unit fired four mortars at Cookstown British army base. Three of the mortars landed inside the base but only one exploded.

15th June 1988: High-ranking UVF member Robert “Squeak” Seymour was shot dead by the IRA in an alley behind his shop on the Woodstock Road in Belfast.

15th June 1988: Six off-duty British soldiers were killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to their unmarked military van in Market Square, Lisburn. The bomb was made in such a way so as to ensure it exploded only upwards, causing maximum damage to the van, but avoiding spraying surrounding vehicles with shrapnel.

22nd June 1988: A British soldier was wounded in an IRA gun and bomb attack in the Westrock area of Belfast.

23rd June 1988: A British Army Lynx helicopter was brought down by the IRA near Upper Cashel Lough Upper in south County Armagh. The aircraft was engaged by two DShKs machine guns, three M60s and rifles from Aughanduff mountain.

4th July 1988: The IRA attacked North Queen Street RUC Station in Belfast but withdrew after being engaged by a heavily armed SAS detachment which had been lying in wait with at least one heavy machine gun. The SAS shot dead a passing taxi driver.

7th July 1988: Two civilians were killed in an IRA bomb attack at the Falls Baths in West Belfast. The IRA released a statement saying that the operation had gone “tragically wrong”. The IRA said the bomb was intended for a British foot patrol but had been triggered accidentally. In the follow-up operation a British Army bomb disposal officer was killed when he stepped on a pressure-plate bomb left nearby.

7th July 1988: An IRA volunteer was killed when an improvised mortar detonated accidentally during an attack on Pomeroy RUC station.

13th July 1988: Nine British soldiers were injured when the IRA detonated two bombs at a British military barracks in Duisburg, Germany.

23rd July 1988: Three civilians were killed by an IRA landmine on the main Belfast to Dublin road near Newry. The bomb was intended for High Court Judge Eoin Higgins, who was returning from Dublin Airport. The civilian vehicle was a similar model and had also been returning from Dublin Airport. Along the route it was driving behind an unmarked Garda car. The IRA believed this was a Garda escort and, judging by the car model and the route taken, it was assumed to the Higgins’s car.

25th July 1988: An IRA volunteer was shot by UVF members wearing RUC uniforms in the Markets area of Belfast.

29th July 1988: A British soldier was killed when an IRA landmine exploded as a British foot patrol passed in Cullyhanna. Two RUC officers and two soldiers were also injured.

1st August 1988: One soldier, Lance Corporal Michael Robbins, was killed and a further 9 were injured by a timer device. The attack was the first Provisional IRA bomb on the UK mainland in four years. The target was the British Army base at the Inglis Barracks in Mill Hill, North London. The two storey building containing the single men’s quarters was completely destroyed.

2nd August 1988: An RUC detective was killed in an IRA under-car booby-trap bomb attack in Sloan Street, Lisburn.

2nd August 1988: A UDR soldier was shot dead in the carpark of a shopping centre in West Belfast by a two man IRA unit. The gun used in the killing had been stolen from one of the corporals killed on 19th March.

2nd August 1988: Six part-time soldiers of the UDR were injured when their vehicle was struck by an IRA explosive device outside Dungannon, county Tyrone.

3rd August 1988: A UDR soldier was killed when he was on his way to work by an IRA unit which had taken over a house in Cookstown, County Tyrone.

4th August 1988: Two contractors who worked for the RUC were killed when the IRA ambushed their van as it left Belleek barracks. The van was hit by over 100 high velocity bullets. Both men were also members of the Orange Order.

8th August 1988: A British soldier died three weeks after being shot by an IRA sniper at New Barnsley base in west Belfast.

12th August 1988: A British Army Sergeant-Major was shot dead by the IRA in Ostend, Belgium.

20th August 1988: Ballygawley bus bombing: Eight British soldiers were killed and 28 wounded in a landmine attack on their bus, which was travelling between Omagh and Ballygawley. The bomb contained 200 pounds of plastic explosive.

22nd August 1988: A British Royal Navy officer was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Belfast.

26th August 1988: Three RUC officers were injured in an IRA bomb attack and a hotel was also destroyed in an explosion.

27th August 1988: The IRA carried out over 200 separate gun and bomb attacks across Northern Ireland, within a 24‑hour period, in a demonstration of the IRA’s military capacity. It was timed to coincide with the extradition hearing of IRA volunteer Robert Russell.

30th August 1988: 3 IRA volunteers, Brian Mullin (26) and brothers Gerard (29) and Martin Harte (23), were killed in an SAS ambush near Drumnakilly, County Tyrone, as they attempted to kill an off-duty member of the Ulster Defence Regiment.

3rd September 1988: Crossmaglen British Army base in County Armagh was hit by three mortars.

9th September 1988: An Ulster Clubs member was shot dead by the IRA in the Finaghy area of Belfast.

12th September 1988: The house of Sir Kenneth Bloomfield, the top civilian servant in Northern Ireland, located at Helen’s Bay, County Down, was heavily damaged by two bombs planted by the IRA. Bloomfield, his wife and children had to be treated for shock.

25th September 1988: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at Loughgall, County Armagh. The IRA unit fired 47 shots in the attack and the soldier was hit a number of times in the lower body. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

4th October 1988: A Prison Officer was killed when his car was blown up by an IRA bomb in the Bloomfield area of Belfast.

7th October 1988: A British soldier was wounded in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Belfast.

11th October 1988: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA on the Lisburn Road in Belfast. He was looking after his brother’s ice cream shop when two men entered and shot him a number of times at close range with .357 Magnums.

17th October 1988: A contractor to the British Army was killed in an IRA bomb attack in the Dundonald area of Belfast. The IRA also claimed he was linked to the UVF.

26th October 1988: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Kinawley, County Fermanagh.

26th October 1988: A civilian was killed by a booby-trap bomb attached to his car at his workplace (a postal sorting office) on Tomb Street, Belfast. The IRA claimed responsibility and said it believed he was a member of the UDR.

21st November 1988: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA attack on a security barrier in Castlederg, County Tyrone.

13th December 1988: A contractor to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA in Portadown, County Armagh.

14th December 1988: A rocket was fired at an RUC landrover at a court-house in Newry. Two RUC officers and a civilian were hurt. The IRA claimed responsibility.

16th December 1988: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Downpatrick, County Down.

1989

4th January 1989: Two RUC officers were injured in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in the New Barnsley area of Belfast.

15th January 1989: A former RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while parked outside his girlfriends house in Ballintra, County Donegal. Two IRA volunteers fired into the car through the front windscreen, shooting him 23 times. Shortly after the killing the IRA announced that it had stood down one of its units which operated along the Fermanagh-Donegal border.

28th January 1989: An RUC officer was killed when an IRA unit launched a drogue-bomb at a stationary patrol vehicle in Sion Mills, Tyrone. The device was thrown from the roof of a nearby building as the car stopped on a routine inquiry. A second officer was badly injured in the attack.

31st January 1989: A British soldier was killed when an IRA unit detonated a remote control bomb which was hidden in a drainpipe as a British Army foot-patrol passed in the Falls area of Belfast.

6th February 1989: IRA volunteer James Joseph Connolly (20) was killed when a bomb he was planting under an RUC officers car exploded accidentally.

20th February 1989: The IRA bombed a British Army barracks at Ternhill in Shropshire, England. One person was injured.

22nd February 1989: A British soldier was shot dead when a military bus came under gun attack from an IRA unit in the Waterside area of Derry. Lance Corporal Norman Duncan, aged 27, was shot by an IRA Unit as he drove from Ebrington Barracks in Derry to the nearby Ebrington Primary School to collect the children of British soldiers in a school bus. As the bus stopped at a junction a man jumped out of a nearby car, walked over to the bus and fired 15 shots at the driver, hitting him six times in the head and abdomen.

26th February 1989: A man was shot in the head by the IRA in an alley in the Lenadoon area of Belfast. The man was an estate agent and was accused of being an informer for providing the IRA with safe-houses which were bugged by the security forces.

27th February 1989: A former RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby trap bomb attack at his home in east Belfast. The IRA also accused the man of being involved with loyalist paramilitaries. The RUC denied this.

7th March 1989: The IRA carried out a machine gun attack on a building in Coagh, which they claimed was used by loyalists to plan attacks. Three civilians were killed. The IRA claimed that one of the people killed, Leslie Dallas, was a UVF member but that the other two men had been “caught up in the confusion”. The security forces and the UVF denied Dallas was a UVF member.

8th March 1989: Two British soldiers were killed and six other badly wounded when their vehicle struck a massive IRA landmine on the Buncrana Road in Derry. The second vehicle in the patrol was completely destroyed.

14th March 1989: An off duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while at his workplace in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

16th March: A senior UVF member was shot dead by the IRA while at his home in the Skegoneill area of Belfast. An IRA unit entered his home and shot him 15 times at close range.

20th March 1989: Two high-ranking RUC officers, Superintendent Bob Buchanan and Chief Superintendent Harry Breen, were ambushed and killed by the IRA near the Irish border outside Jonesborough, County Armagh. They were shot dead by a six man unit using four rifles. There were at least 25 strikemarks on their unmarked car.

4th April 1989: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the UDA/UFF as he slept beside his wife in their Rasharkin home. It is alleged by the IRA and Father Raymond Murray that there was collusion between security forces and loyalists in his death.

12th April 1989: A civilian was killed when the IRA detonated a car-bomb at Warrenpoint RUC barracks. The IRA said one of its members had accidentally triggered a microswitch device which caused the bomb to explode early. The bomb was meant to go off an hour later after a smokebomb had detonated first to clear the area.

21st April 1989: The IRA shot dead a civilian in his taxi on the Crumlin Road in Belfast. The IRA originally claimed he was a loyalist paramilitary however it has since emerged that the attack was planned by Sandy Lynch, a British Agent who had penetrated the IRA. He had tipped off the security forces of the attack and an SAS team were lying in wait for the IRA unit. The IRA escaped because they killed the man further up the road than expected. Lynch was later kidnapped by the IRA and was being interrogated in a house in Belfast when he was rescued by the RUC. One of those arrested in the operation was Danny Morrisson.

24th April 1989: A 400 lb (180 kg) IRA van-bomb failed to explode in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast. Despite a warning from the IRA that there was a primed and unexploded bomb on a main road the RUC refused to close the street and only responded to the incident 13 hours later.

4th May 1989: A Prison Officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to his car in Loughgall, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

4th May 1989: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British army foot patrol just outside Crossmaglen, County Armagh. Three other soldiers were wounded. Seamus Mallon MP criticised both the IRA and the British Army for “turning south Armagh into one huge warzone”.

10th May 1989: A British soldier was badly injured losing both his legs and his right eye when the IRA carried out a remote-controlled bomb attack on his patrol on the Falls Road in Belfast.

13th May 1989: The IRA launched a mortar attack on 13th May 1989 against a British Army observation post in Glassdrumman, South Armagh. The attack involved the first use of the Mark-12 mortar.

19th June 1989: A bomb exploded at a British Army base in Osnabrück, Germany. Nobody was injured, but the explosion caused damage estimated at £75,000.

27th June 1989: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby trap bomb attack in Strabane, Tyrone.

1st July 1989: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Garvagh, County Londonderry. Two IRA men shot at him as he sat in his parents house.

2th July 1989: A British soldier was killed in an IRA booby trap bomb attack outside his home in Hanover, Germany. He was killed when an IRA bomb exploded as he opened the door of his Mercedes car.

3rd July 1989: A triple IRA bomb attack at Belfast Harbour Airport damaged two aircraft and a control tower.

7th July 1989: A number of RUC officers were injured in an IRA landmine attack in Red Arch Bay, County Antrim. One officer died of his wounds 18 days later.

15th July 1989: The IRA bombed the headquarters of a British phone company in Belfast. The IRA telephoned in a 20-minute warning to a local radio station. There were no civilian casualties.

18th July 1989: The IRA kidnapped and killed a civilian near Dundalk. They claimed he was an informer who had aided the RUC in their arrest of Raymond McCreesh. They also said he regularly met his RUC handler in the Downshire Arms Hotel in Banbridge.

12th August 1989: An IRA bomb wrecked a pub in Derry, just hours before the yearly Apprentice Boys parade.

7th September 1989: A German civilian woman, 26-year-old Heidi Hazell, was shot dead in West Germany. She had been sitting in a car with British license plates outside the British Army married quarters in Unna. A gunman walked up to the car and shot her 14 times at point-blank range with an AK47. The IRA expressed regret for the death and claimed she had been shot “in the belief that she was a member of the British Army garrison” at nearby Dortmund. It did not apologize and warned civilians to “keep well clear of military personnel.”

11th September 1989: A number of mortars were fired at a Royal Air Force radar station south of Belfast. No injuries were reported.

16th September 1989: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper during an attack on Coalisland British Army base, County Tyrone. The soldier was fixing a radio mast on the roof when an IRA volunteer fired up to 30 shots at him. His body dangled from a safety line until he was eventually cut down.

22nd September 1989: Eleven British Royal Marines were killed and 22 other soldiers injured when the IRA bombed their barracks in Deal, Kent, England.

4th October 1989: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA on Cavehill Road in Belfast. The Sunday Tribune reported that he had been killed by mistake, and that a loyalist paramilitary was the intended target. The IRA’s Belfast Brigade issued an apology and claimed it had been a case of mistaken identity.

8th October 1989: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to his car outside his home on Dalboyne Gardens, Lisburn. The officer was a Superintendent and the sub-divisional commander for Newcastle, County Down.

9th October 1989: A British soldier (who was also a member of Ulster Resistance) was shot dead by the IRA in Kilrea, County Londonderry. He was shot a number of times in the head as he waited for collection by his employer.

18th October 1989: A member of Ulster Resistance was shot dead by the IRA at his home near Lurgan, County Armagh. Three IRA volunteers entered his shop, which sold loyalist regalia, and shot him a number of times at close range.

20th October 1989: An RUC officer was shot dead during an IRA ambush of an RUC armoured patrol near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. Another soldier was badly wounded, having been shot multiple times. The IRA unit pulled out in front of the RUC vehicle in a lorry and opened fire with a DShK heavy machine-gun. The car was hit 66 times. The killed officer was also a member of the Orange Order.

26th October 1989: IRA members opened fire on the car of an RAF corporal in West Germany. The car had stopped at a petrol station snack bar near RAF Wildenrath and inside it were the corporal, his wife, and their six-month-old daughter. The corporal and his daughter were killed; his wife suffered shock. The IRA expressed regret for the child’s death and claimed its members did not know she was in the car.

26th October 1989: An IRA unit launched a multiple mortar attack on Crossmaglen British Army base, County Armagh.

3rd November 1989: A 1600 lb van bomb exploded outside an RUC base in Derry. There were no injuries.

4th November 1989: A rocket was fired at an RUC landrover in West Belfast. Two RUC officers and two civilians were hurt.

17th November 1989: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside Drumad British Army base, Armagh town. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

18th November 1989: Three British soldiers were killed after entering a derelict cottage which had been booby-trapped by the IRA in County Down. The bomb contained almost 400 kg of explosive. A fourth soldier was badly wounded.

18th November 1989: Two British soldiers were wounded when an IRA carbomb exploded at a British Army barracks in Colchester, England.

13th December 1989: Two British soldiers were killed and one wounded during the Attack on Derryard checkpoint, near Rosslea, County Fermanagh. The attack was the only recorded use of a military flamethrower by the IRA.

18th December 1989: The IRA planted a 270 kg car bomb in Rathfriland, County Down, outside the homes of members of the British security services. The device only partially exploded causing moderate damage.
22nd December 1989: Two IRA members were arrested while transporting explosives in Newgale, England.

1990 

2nd January 1990: Ulster loyalist militant Harry Dickey, a member of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and Ulster Democratic Party, was killed by an IRA booby trap bomb attached to his car in east Belfast.

2nd January 1990: An IRA unit threw a bomb at a Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) base on Stewartstown Road, Belfast.

3rd January 1990: A British soldier was injured in an IRA car bomb attack in Magherafelt, County Londonderry.

9th January 1990: A soldier of the British Army’s Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) was shot dead by the IRA on the Main Street of Castlederg, County Tyrone. In a follow-up operation, two RUC officers were injured by a bomb left by the IRA unit. The soldier was also a member of the Orange Order.

16th January 1990: An IRA bomb was defused at the British Army’s Headquarters in Aldershot, England.

20th January 1990: The IRA carried out a mortar attack on the RUC/British Army base at Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

22nd January 1990: An RUC inspector was shot dead by an IRA unit in Kilburn Park, Armagh town. Up to 30 rounds were fired through his kitchen door hitting him five times in the head, neck and body.

28th January 1990: A civilian was killed when he was hit by debris when an IRA bomb exploded on Derry’s walls during a Bloody Sunday march. The security forces described his death as a “freak accident” as he was a quarter of a mile from the bomb, which was targeting security forces. The young man was a member of Republican Youth and a supporter of Sinn Féin and the IRA. He is commemorated at a Sinn Féin-organised march in his hometown of Strabane each year.

11th February 1990: Three British soldiers were injured when their Gazelle helicopter was forced out of the sky after being hit by machine-gun fire from an IRA unit. The incident occurred near Clogher, County Tyrone. See 1990 British Army Gazelle shootdown.

20th February 1990: The IRA bombed a British military recruitment office in Leicester, England. Two people were injured.

20th February 1990: A van and a car driven by an IRA unit carrying light machine guns were spotted by a British Wessex helicopter near Newtownhamilton, South Armagh. The IRA unit split up in several vehicles, but one of the cars was pinpointed by the aircraft, and three IRA volunteers were arrested by a party of three soldiers and two RUC officers after landing from their helicopter in Silverbridge. Afterwards, a crowd of 40 civilians attacked the security forces, allowing the escape of the three IRA men. A number of automatic weapons were confiscated in the aftermath, among them two light machine guns.

25th February 1990: The IRA bombed a British Army recruitment office in Halifax, England.

8th March 1990: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at Tullynure, near Dungannon, County Tyrone. He was driving a lorry for a building firm which was contracted to the British Army. A three-man IRA unit attacked the lorry with a grenade and fired over 30 shots into the cab.

16th March 1990: First use of the Barret M82 sniper rifle in Northern Ireland by the South Armagh sniper teams. A British soldier suffered only minor head injures when a bullet pierced his helmet on Сastleblaney Road, County Armagh.

24th March 1990: There was a gun battle between an IRA unit and undercover British forces at the village of Cappagh, County Tyrone, when a civilian-type vehicle driven by an undercover agent was fired on by IRA volunteers without warning, according to Archie Hamilton, then Secretary of State for Defence. Republican newspaper An Phoblacht claims that a Special Air Service (SAS) ambush was thwarted and at least two undercover soldiers were killed. Hamilton states that there were no casualties.

25th March 1990: A 1,000 lb IRA van bomb exploded in front of the RUC base in Ballymena, County Antrim. Another RUC base was bombed in County Tyrone.

28th March 1990: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit at his home on Newry Road in Armagh town. He was killed when a burst of shots were fired through his kitchen window.

2nd April 1990: An IRA bomb was defused by a controlled explosion outside Fort George British Army base in Derry.

9th April 1990: Four UDR soldiers were killed when the IRA detonated a landmine under their patrol vehicle in Downpatrick, County Down. The landmine contained over 1,000 lb (450 kg) of explosive and was so powerful that the vehicle was blown into a nearby field.

16th April 1990: The IRA shot dead IPLO volunteer Eoin Morley in Newry. He was dragged from his girlfriend’s house and shot twice in the back. The IRA initially claimed he was an informer but later apologised for the killing claiming they had received false information.

27th April 1990: A contractor to the British Army was killed by the IRA when he triggered a booby-trap bomb attached to his car in Kilkeel, County Down.

28th April 1990: Several mortar shells were fired by the IRA at a military checkpoint in Strabane, County Tyrone.

28th April 1990: A British soldier was shot and wounded in the leg when his patrol was ambushed by an IRA unit firing a heavy machine gun near Cullyhanna, County Armagh.

2nd May 1990: A bomb exploded under a landrover in Lisburn Territorial Army base, injuring a civilian employee. An RUC base in Derry was hit by a mortar, although no injuries were reported.

5th May 1990: A British soldier was shot dead when an IRA unit launched an attack on a British Army foot patrol near Cullyhanna, County Armagh. The patrol had become suspicious of a derelict building after seeing smoke coming from the chimney on a hot day. As they approached they came under heavy machine gun fire and one soldier was shot in the head. A total of 188 bullets were fired by the IRA unit. The patrol were air-lifted to safety. ( See Operation Conservation. )

16th May 1990: The IRA detonated a bomb under a military minibus in London, killing Sgt Charles Chapman, and injuring four other soldiers.

27th May 1990: Two Australian tourists, Nick Spanos and Stephen Melrose, were shot dead in the Netherlands, having been mistaken for off-duty British soldiers from a base across the German border. The IRA said it “deeply regretted the tragedy”.

1st June 1990: A British soldier was killed and two others wounded when they were shot at close range by an IRA unit while waiting for a train at Lichfield railway station in Staffordshire, England.

2nd June 1990: A British Royal Artillery officer was shot dead by the IRA in Dortmund in West Germany. He was one of the most senior soldiers killed in the conflict – having the rank of Major. In a subsequent car chase a West German police officer was injured when the IRA unit fired on the pursuing officers.

6th June 1990: An RUC officer and his wife were killed when an IRA booby trap bomb exploded underneath their car on the Ballygomartin Road in Belfast. A civilian was slightly injured when the car struck her.

9th June 1990: The IRA bombed the headquarters of the British Army’s Honourable Artillery Company in central London. Nineteen people at the barracks were injured.

14th June 1990: A large IRA bomb badly damaged a building inside a British Army base at Hanover, West Germany.

25th June 1990: A bomb exploded at the Carlton Club in London, injuring 20 people.

28th June 1990: A British soldier was wounded when the IRA opened fire on a military patrol in the main street of Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

30th June 1990: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA ambush on Castle Street, Belfast. Both officers were shot at close range in the back of the head in front of dozens of shoppers.

2nd July 1990: Ten people were hurt when an IRA rocket hit an RUC base in Belfast.

20th July 1990: Following a telephoned warning, an IRA bomb exploded inside the London Stock Exchange. It blew a hole in the side of the building, but there were no injuries.

24th July 1990: Three RUC officers and one civilian were killed when an IRA unit ambushed a joint RUC and British Army patrol on Killylea Road in Armagh town. The patrol car was hit by a landmine, which blew it off the road and into a hedge. The officers were also members of the Orange Order. The IRA and Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin apologised for the death of the civilian, a Catholic nun.

26th July 1990: The IRA shot dead bomb-maker Patrick Gerard Flood after discovering he was an RUC informer, following a series of botched bomb attacks and the capture of a number of IRA men in Derry. His body was found near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

30th July 1990 Ian Gow MP was assassinated by the IRA when a booby trap bomb exploded under his car at his home in East Sussex, England. The IRA said they killed him because of his role in British policy decisions in Northern Ireland.

13th August 1990: The IRA planted a bomb at the Berkshire home of British Army General Sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley. The device was defused.

18th August 1990: A builder was killed by a booby-trap bomb on a building site in Castlederg, County Tyrone. The IRA said it carried out the attack because the building firm worked for the security forces.

4th September 1990: The IRA tested a new type of bomb in County Fermanagh. An 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) bomb was loaded onto an unmanned tractor and trailer near Roslea and driven by remote control towards a British Army outpost. The attack failed when the massive bomb caused the tractor to overturn but the remotely delivered bomb would later be used in successful attacks on British Army installations in County Armagh, such as the attack on Cloghoge checkpoint.

5th September 1990: Several RUC officers were injured when the IRA detonated a van bomb at Loughgall RUC base in County Armagh. A local church and a school were also damaged.

6th September 1990: The IRA planted two bombs inside the Royal Navy’s Royal Fleet Auxiliary ship the RFA Fort Victoria (A387). One of the bombs was defused, but the other bomb went off. The blast caused extensive damage to the engine room, resulting in severe flooding. Because of the bombing and other construction problems, the ship was put out of action for three years.

10th September 1990: The IRA bombed a British Army and Navy recruiting office in Derby, England.

16th September 1990: An RUC detective was kidnapped and later shot dead by the IRA in County Armagh. A van in which he and five prison officers were travelling was stopped at an IRA checkpoint. Three prison officers managed to escape, but the RUC detective and two prison officers were bundled into the back of waiting cars. The two prison officers were released, but the RUC officer was shot in the back of the head and his body dumped near Belleeks.

17th September 1990 A British Army sergeant was shot and injured by the IRA outside an army recruiting office in Finchley, London.

18th September 1990: The IRA attempted to kill Air Chief Marshal Sir Peter Terry at his Staffordshire home. Terry had been a prime target since his days as Governor of Gibraltar, where he signed the documents allowing the SAS to operate against IRA volunteers in 1988. The revenge attack took place at 9 pm at the Main Road house. The gunman opened fire through a window, hitting him at least nine times and injuring his wife, Lady Betty Terry, near the eye. The couple’s daughter, Liz, was found suffering from shock. Terry’s face had to be rebuilt as the shots shattered his face, and two high-velocity bullets lodged a fraction of an inch from his brain.

20th September 1990: A British soldier was hit and wounded during a heavy machine gun attack on an army patrol at Drumalt, south County Armagh.

23rd September 1990: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at Oxford Island, County Armagh. He was sitting in his car when he was shot 13 times.

26th September 1990: A British Army helicopter was fired at while landing at Newtownhamilton British Army base, County Armagh. One soldier was wounded.

27th September 1990: An IRA bomb was defused at the Royal Over-Seas League building in central London.

9th October 1990: IRA volunteers Martin McCaughey and Dessie Grew were killed by the SAS near Loughgall, County Armagh. They were alleged to have been unarmed at the time.

13th October 1990: The IRA attacked an RUC/British Army patrol at a security barrier in Belfast. A lone IRA volunteer armed with a Browning Hi-Power pistol approached an RUC vehicle at the barrier and fired a number of shots through the window. The pistol which was used had been captured from Michael Stone during his attack on a funeral two years earlier. Two RUC officers were wounded and one died of his wounds two days later.

20th October 1990: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Strabane. An IRA unit rammed his car on the Melmount Road. Three IRA volunteers then left their car and began shooting into the man’s car with rifles and handguns.

23rd October 1990: A UVF member was shot dead by the IRA on the Falls Road, Belfast. Two men approached his car on either side. As one distracted him from the passenger side another leaned through the window and shot him in the head. The IRA initially claimed he was a UFF member although it later emerged he was a member of the UVF.

24th October 1990: In a proxy bomb attack, the IRA forced a British Army civilian employee to deliver a bomb to a British Army checkpoint at Buncrana Road, on the County Donegal border. The bomb detonated, killing the employee and five British soldiers. As the bomb exploded an IRA unit opened fire from across the border. Over 25 houses in a neaby estate were damaged by the bomb.

24th October 1990: A British soldier was killed in an IRA proxy-bomb attack at a permanent vehicle check point in Killeen, County Armagh.

24th October 1990: An attempted IRA proxy-bomb attack against a British Army base in Omagh failed when the bomb did not fully explode.

2nd November 1990: A UDR soldier was killed by the IRA when he triggered a booby trap bomb attached to a car in Cookstown, County Tyrone. A 19-year-old nurse had left a car rigged with explosives in his Cookstown garage and asked him to work on it. When he put the car in gear it exploded. The soldier was also a member of the Orange Order.

10th November 1990: Two RUC officers (one Special Branch detective and one constable), a former UDR soldier and a civilian were shot dead by the IRA while they were out shooting wildfowl at Castor Bay, County Armagh. The RUC officer and the civilian were both members of the Orange Order.

1st December 1990: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Derry. The IRA’s Derry Brigade said he was killed because he worked for a building firm which was contracted to the British Army and not because he was a former British soldier. His wife was injured in the shooting, the IRA described her injury as “regrettable”. The former soldier had been a member of the Royal Black Institution and the Royal British Legion.

3rd December 1990: A civilian was shot dead at his mobile home on Crew Road in Maghera, County Londonderry. The IRA admitted responsibility and said it believed the man was member of the security forces. It later “profoundly apologised” and said that its volunteers had been acting on “erroneous information”.

5th December 1990: An IRA bomb caused serious damage on the Belfast-Dublin railway near Jonesborough, County Armagh.

20th December 1990: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Waringstown, County Down. The officer was shot eight times by a sniper who was waiting in a nearby field. As the officer approached in his car the gunman opened fire.

26th December 1990: An RUC patrol manning a checkpoint exchanged fire with an IRA unit at Annaghmartin, County Fermanagh.

1991

1st January 1991: A gunfight erupted between an IRA unit and British soldiers at a border Army checkpoint at Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.

5th January 1991: A factory and six shops in Belfast were destroyed by incendiary devices planted by the IRA.

8th January 1991: An IRA culvert bomb injured three soldiers and a civilian and caused extensive damage to nearby houses on Dundalk road, Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

21st January 1991: A former RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Brookeborough, County Fermanagh.

24th January 1991: An IRA unit threw an explosive device at a British Army base in Staffordshire, England. At least one shot was also fired.

28th January 1991: The IRA bombed a furniture store at Belfast.

30th January 1991: After an IRA car bomb attack, a dairy firm in Armagh town agreed not to supply the British Army or the RUC.

3rd February 1991: The IRA launched another “proxy bomb” attack on a British Army Ulster Defense Regiment base in Magherafelt, County Londonderry. The bomb caused major damage to the base and nearby houses, but the driver escaped before it exploded.

7th February 1991: The IRA launched a mortar attack on members of the British Cabinet and the Prime Minister, John Major in a Cabinet session at Number 10 Downing Street at the height of a huge security clampdown amid the Gulf War.

14th February 1991: One UDR soldier was seriously wounded and another escaped injury when two San Valentine’s card bombs exploded in Killen and Castlederg, County Tyrone.

15th February 1991: The IRA attempted to shoot down one British RAF helicopter that was extracting men from the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment after a border patrol from St Angelo Barracks, Trory, County Fermanagh. More than 360 rounds were fired from across the border.

18th February 1991: A bomb exploded at Victoria Station, one man was killed and 38 people injured. A bomb also exploded at Paddington Station delaying upwards of 500,000 commuters, but there were no injuries. Police confirmed that the IRA had given a 45 minute warning to clear the stations.

24th February 1991: An IRA unit launched a mortar and machine gun assault on a British Army outpost in Silverbridge, County Armagh. A 15-minute gun battle erupted right after the first attack.

25th February 1991: An IRA bomb exploded on a railway line in St. Albans, England.

1st March 1991: Two UDR soldiers were killed in an IRA ambush on Killylea Road in Armagh town. One of the UDR soldiers was an Englishman, who died instantly. The other soldier died on 4 March. This was the first recorded use of the IRA’s Mark-12 horizontal-mortar bomb. ( See Mullacreevie ambush.)

2nd March 1991: The IRA carried out a machine gun attack on a helicopter. The shooting was filmed by a Dublin television crew outside Crossmaglen Health Center, County Armagh. There was no reaction from the British security although the main RUC/Army base was just 50 yards away.

3rd March 1991: IRA volunteers John Quinn (23), Dwayne O’Donnell (17) Malcolm Nugent (20) and one civilian were killed by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) during a gun attack on Boyle’s Bar in Cappagh, County Tyrone. The volunteers arrived in a car as a UVF gang was about to attack the pub. The UVF fired at the car (killing the volunteers) then fired through the window of the pub (killing the civilian). Local republicans wondered how the loyalist unit was able to get away through a heavily patrolled area.

13th March 1991: A British Army checkpoint at Gortmullan, County Fermanagh, was fired on by the IRA. There was another attack on the same spot on 20th April.

20th March 1991: An employee of the firm Locksley Engineering was shot in the arm by IRA members in Belfast, as part of its campaign against companies which supplied security forces. After the shooting, Locksley Engineering announced that they would no longer work for the RUC or the British Army.

22nd March 1991: A female RUC civilian employee was shot and seriously wounded by IRA members outside the RUC headquarters in Derry. Her husband, an RUC officer, had been killed by the IRA in 1987, and the attack stirred widespread condemnation.

23rd March 1991: A UDR soldier was shot and wounded by the IRA in Trillick, County Tyrone.

25th March 1991: There was a rocket attack on an RUC mobile patrol in Newry, County Down. Two RUC officers were injured.

5th April 1991: A number of incendiary devices were planted by the IRA in the Arndale Shopping centre in Manchester, England. They were discovered and defused.

6th April 1991: An RUC officer was killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb attached to his car by the IRA in Ballycastle, County Antrim. The explosion caused the car to burst into flames and roll down a hill where it hit another vehicle which also burst into flames.

9th April 1991: A Protestant civilian was shot dead by the IRA at his mobile home on Aughaveagh Road in Coagh, County Tyrone. A witness said that when the men entered the house they asked him if his name was Derek, when he replied “yes” one of the gunmen responded by saying “Bye bye, Derek” and shot him a number of times. The IRA claimed the man was a member of the UVF, although his family denied this.

10th April 1991: IRA volunteer Colm Marks was shot dead by the RUC while he was preparing a mortar bomb in Downpatrick, County Down. Another Volunteer escaped the ambush.

13th April 1991: The IRA shot dead a man outside his parents’ home in Killen, County Tyrone. The dead man had been listed as a UVF member in Garda Síochána files that the IRA had obtained. The documents stated that the man was wanted in connection with firebomb attacks on premises in Ballybofey, Letterkenny and Castlefin in 1987. The attacks had been claimed by the UFF.

13th April 1991: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA at his shop in Lisburn. An IRA gunman entered the shop and shot him at point blank range.

20th April 1991: The British Army checkpoint at Gortmullan, County Fermanagh, was fired on by the IRA for the second time in a month. Members of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment returned fire with a .50 heavy machine gun, the first time that such a weapon was used by the British Army in the Troubles.

28th April 1991: The IRA fired a Mark-12 mortar at the RUC base in Carrickmore, County Tyrone.

1st May 1991: An RUC sergeant was killed after his patrol vehicle was hit by an IRA rocket in Beechmount, Belfast. Two other officers were badly injured.

13th May 1991: A former RUC officer was killed when an IRA booby-trap bomb exploded underneath his car as he drove along The Mall in Armagh town. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

17th May 1991: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Lisbellaw, County Fermanagh.

12th May 1991: A man was shot dead by the IRA in east Belfast. The victim owned a fruit and vegetable firm and had been supplying the security forces. He had been warned four times previously to cease supplying them.

25th May 1991: A British soldier was killed when the IRA fired a grenade into North Howard Street British Army Base, west Belfast. Another soldier lost both of his legs in the attack. The IRA claimed that they used a new type of grenade.

26th May 1991: Two RUC officers were injured when an IRA bomb exploded in a Protestant housing area at Cookstown, County Tyrone; 130 houses were damaged.

27th May 1991: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA ambush in Lower Crescent, Belfast. IRA volunteers ambushed the patrol at close range with handguns. The dead RUC officer was shot 5 times. A nearby UDR patrol returned fire but the IRA unit escaped.

31st May 1991: Glenanne barracks bombing: Three UDR soldiers were killed and up to 40 injured when the IRA detonated a lorry-bomb packed with 2,500 lb (1,100 kg) of explosives outside Glenanne British Army Base in County Armagh. The bomb was so large that it could be heard in County Dublin, over 60 km away. A 60-metre-deep crater was left by the blast, and most of the cows and other animals in surrounding farms were killed. The soldiers were also members of the Orange Order.

2nd June 1991: A female civil servant was critically injured outside her house in County Antrim by a booby-trap planted under her car. The IRA later apologised, calling the attack ‘a mistake’.

3rd June 1991: IRA volunteers Lawrence McNally (38), Peter Ryan (37) and Tony Doris (21) were killed in an ambush by an SAS unit at Coagh, County Tyrone. The British Army stated that the IRA volunteers had been intercepted on their way to an attack. Over 200 rounds were fired at the car.

17th June 1991: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Duncrue, Belfast. An IRA unit ambushed his car using an AKM rifle and a .357 Magnum handgun. The soldier was hit 7 times in the neck and body.

19th June 1991: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while off-duty in Strandtown, Belfast. British informer Martin McGartland (later shot and badly wounded by the IRA) alleged that he drove the getaway car.

26th June 1991: Two bombs exploded outside the Queen Street RUC station in Belfast, injuring 20 people. Two suspected IRA members were arrested in the aftermath.

28th June 1991: An IRA bomb was defused at a theatre in Middlesex, England.

29th June 1991: Ulster Democratic Party member and UDA/UFF commander Cecil McKnight was shot dead by the IRA in the Waterside area of Derry City. The IRA claimed he had been involved in the assassination of Sinn Féin Councillor Eddie Fullerton. The IRA unit were pursued by the RUC after the shooting but escaped after they opened fire on an RUC patrol car.

30th June 1991: An IRA bomb was disabled by a controlled explosion at a Royal Navy and Royal Air Force recruiting office in Preston, England.

19th July 1991: The IRA fired a Surface-to-air missile at a RAF Wessex helicopter at Kinawley in County Fermanagh. The missile failed to lock onto the helicopter and exploded on the ground.

19th July 1991: The IRA shot dead a civilian who they claimed was an informer for the Garda Síochána in Dundalk.

5th August 1991: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while driving his car along Altmore Road, Cappagh, County Tyrone. The IRA said he was a member of the UVF.

8th August 1991: British informer Martin McGartland was kidnapped by the IRA in Belfast. He was being interrogated in a flat when he managed to escape by jumping out of a third floor window.

9th August 1991: Ulster Democratic Party member and UDA/UFF member Gary Lynch was shot dead by the IRA in Lisahally, County Londonderry. Lynch had been a pall bearer at the funeral of senior UDP and UDA/UFF member Cecil McKnight who was shot dead by the IRA two months earlier.

15th August 1991: A civilian was killed and a number of British soldiers wounded when the IRA launched a grenade at a British Army foot patrol in the Falls area of Belfast.

15th August 1991: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at a farm in Sion Mills, County Tyrone.

17th August 1991: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a 300 lb (140 kg) landmine as a British Army Patrol passed near Cullyhanna, County Armagh.

22nd August 1991: The IRA carried out a bombing against the RUC base at Kilrea, County Londonderry using a 200 lb device.

28th August 1991: A 1,000 lb explosive device planted by the IRA in Markethill, County Armagh, destroyed an RUC base and damaged in different degree all the buildings of the village, some of them beyond repair. A great deal of livestock was killed.

29th August 1991: Three IRA incendiary devices were defused in a London underground depot near Hammersmith.

3rd September 1991: An attempted proxy-bombing in County Armagh failed when the truck slid off the road into a ditch.

10th September 1991: A UVF member was shot dead by the IRA in the Village area of Belfast. A two man IRA unit entered the house and the victim jumped from his bedroom window to escape but the IRA shot him from the window. One of the members then ran downstairs and him again as he lay wounded. In total he was shot 8 times. The suggestion that he was a UVF member was denied by his family although the man had a tattoo with the letters “UVF” on his arm and a number of UVF emblems in his bedroom.

17th September 1991: An RUC officer was killed and several British soldiers wounded when the IRA carried out a horizontal mortar attack against a joint patrol in Swatragh, County Londonderry.

( 18th September 1991: Sgt Thomas Ross, RTA )

19th September 1991: A British Army contractor was shot dead at his workplace in Duncrue, Belfast. A two man IRA team, who were not wearing any masks, walked into his office and shot him twice in the chest and once in the head.

2nd November 1991: Two British soldiers were killed when the IRA detonated a bomb at Musgrave Park British Army base in Belfast. A two storey building in the base was destroyed by the blast.

6th November 1991: The IRA fired a horizontal mortar at a four-vehicle UDR patrol in Bellaghy, County Londonderry. The mortar hit the last vehicle in the patrol, killing a UDR soldier and wounding another.

( 8th November 1991: L/Cpl Wayne Harris, Rfn Christopher Williams, RTA. Hit a bridge in Armagh.

13th November 1991: The IRA shot dead a UDA member and a civilian at their home on Lecale Street, Belfast. Two IRA volunteers armed with an AK-47 assault rifle and a 9mm pistol opened fire, hitting the UDA man at least nine times and the other man six times. The IRA claimed that both men were UDA members although only one of their names appears on a UDA “roll of honour”. In a separate attack two civilians were killed when the IRA attacked their home on Upper Crumlin Road, Belfast. The building was previously owned by a UVF member and it is suspected he was the intended target.

(14th November 1991: Cpl Matthew Maddocks, Helicopter crash, Gortin Glen, Omagh)

15th November 1991: IRA volunteers Patricia Black (18) and Frank Ryan (26) were killed in St Albans when their bomb detonated prematurely. A civilian was also injured.

24th November 1991: One UVF member and one UDA member were killed and eight others injured when the IRA managed to plant a bomb in the dining hall used by loyalist prisoners in the Crumlin Road Prison, Belfast.

27th November 1991: A UDR soldier was kidnapped, shot dead by the IRA while off-duty in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

1st December 1991: Four IRA devices exploded in separate retail premises on the Tottenham Court Road, London. There were no injuries.

2nd December 1991: An IRA incendiary device ignited in a Littlewoods store on Oxford Street, London.

4th December 1991: A car bomb in Belfast caused widespread destruction on the Grand Opera House and left 16 people injured.

7th December 1991: A large number of explosive devices were found in shops and businesses in Blackpool, England.

8th December 1991: Seven incendiary devices exploded in the Manchester Arndale in England. There were no injuries.

12th December 1991: An IRA truck-bomb wrecked the RUC station in Craigavon, County Armagh, injuring more than 60 people. Another IRA device exploded on the grounds of a vacated Territorial Army base near Derry.

12th December 1991: Cpl Lawrence Dean Wall, Death by violent or unnatural causes.

14th December 1991: Four IRA explosive devices were discovered in Brent Cross shopping centre, London.

15th December 1991: An IRA incendiary device partially exploded in the National Gallery in London.

16th December 1991: The IRA detonated a bomb on a railway line near Clapham Junction in England.

23rd December 1991: Three IRA firebombs exploded at separate underground railway stations in London. There were no injuries although an estimated 50,000 commuters were affected and the cost the city around $90 million.

1992

A Sniper at work sign, near Crossmaglen, warns British troops of the presence of the South Armagh Sniper.
1st January 1992: There was a gun battle between British troops and an IRA unit at Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

10th January 1992: A small device explodes in Whitehall Place, London following a telephoned warning. No injuries.

13th January 1992: An IRA booby-trap bomb killed a civilian in Coalisland, County Tyrone. The man was killed by a bomb that had been attached to his car by a magnet. It was a case of mistaken identity; the IRA had received information that he was working as a labourer on a British Army barracks (he was a joiner by trade) but this turned out to be untrue. The IRA extended sympathy to the dead man’s family.

17th January 1992: An IRA landmine blew up a minibus at Teebane near Cookstown, County Tyrone. It killed eight men who were working as building contractors for the British Army in Omagh. Another six contractors were badly injured. One of the dead was also a British soldier of the Royal Irish Rangers regiment.

27th January 1992: A civilian was injured when an IRA bomb exploded at the bottom of Rockdale Street in Belfast.

30th January 1992: An IRA firebomb was defused at Elephant and Castle, London.

31st January 1992: An IRA van bomb blew up in downtown Dungannon, County Tyrone, causing three wounded and substantial damaged both on the city center and the security base.

2nd February 1992: The IRA detonated a car-bomb on Botanic Avenue, Belfast. The explosion caused widespread damage.

3rd February 1992: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon, County Tyrone. Two men followed him to a supermarket and opened fire with AK-47 assault rifles, hitting him 32 times. The IRA claimed the man was a member of the UVF. The RUC refused to comment on the claim.

5th February 1992: Joseph MacManus, an IRA volunteer from Sligo Town, County Sligo was killed near the border at Mulleek, near Belleek, County Fermanagh during a gun battle following the attempted ambush of a UDR soldier. A UDR soldier was badly wounded in the attack.

7th February 1992: An IRA firebomb was discovered at Neasden, London.

11th February 1992: An IRA bomb was defused on Parliament Street, Exeter.

15th February 1992: The IRA detonated a 450 lb (200 kg) bomb on Adelaide Street, Belfast. The bomb caused millions of pounds worth of damage.

16th February 1992: IRA volunteers Kevin Barry O’Donnell (21), Sean O’Farrell (23), Peter Clancy (19) and Daniel Patrick Vincent (20) were ambushed and killed by the SAS in Clonoe, County Tyrone. The IRA unit had just attacked Coalisland RUC base using a DShK heavy machine gun mounted on the back of a stolen lorry. The men were ambushed in a graveyard following the attack by undercover British soldiers. Two other IRA volunteers were wounded during the ambush but managed to escape. A British soldier was also injured during the incident.

28th February 1992: The IRA detonated a bomb at London Bridge railway station injuring 29 people.

29th February 1992: An IRA bomb exploded at the Crown Prosecution Service building in London injuring two people.

1st March 1992: A small IRA bomb was defused at White Hart Lane BR station in London.

5th March 1992: A 1,000 lb IRA bomb exploded in the center of Lurgan, County Armagh, causing extensive damage to commercial properties.

5th March 1992: A British soldier was injured by an IRA bomb near Augher, County Tyrone.

9th March 1992: The IRA destroyed a service station on the Ballygawley/Dungannon road, County Tyrone, on the basis that they were supplying British forces.

10th March 1992: A small IRA bomb exploded near Wandsworth Common railway station in London. There were no injuries.

15th March 1992: An IRA unit fired more than 1,000 rounds at two helicopters from across the border near Roslea, County Fermanagh.

24th March 1992: The IRA detonated a massive car-bomb containing over 1,100 lb (500 kg) of explosive in Pakenham Street, Belfast. The bomb caused severe damage to the RUC base and nearby business premises

27th March 1992: A female RUC officer was killed when an IRA unit hit her patrol vehicle with a horizontal mortar in Newry, County Down. Another Police Constable lost both his legs in the attack.

6th April 1992: A small IRA bomb exploded near Piccadilly Circus in London. There were no injuries.

10th April 1992: The IRA detonated a large truck-bomb at 30 St Mary Axe in the City of London. Despite a warning to evacuate the area, three civilians were killed and 91 injured. Many buildings were heavily damaged, including the Baltic Exchange.

11th April 1992: A large IRA car-bomb exploded at Staples Corner in London causing serious damage to buildings and nearby roads.

11th April 1992: An IRA bomb partially exploded in a shop in Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

13th April 1992: A 500 lb (230 kg) IRA car-bomb was defused outside Castlereagh RUC base.

18th April 1992: An employee of the British Army was shot dead by the IRA at his home on Nialls Crescent in Armagh town. At least 18 shots were fired at him through the front door from a high velocity weapon.

1st May 1992: A British soldier was killed when the IRA used a specially designed unmanned railway bogie to deliver a bomb to a British Army permanent vehicle checkpoint at Cloghoge, County Armagh. ( See Attack on Cloghoge checkpoint.)

5th May 1992: A Mark-12 mortar, fired by an IRA unit, overshot Rosemount RUC station in County Londonderry and damaged several houses nearby.

8th May 1992: A 1,000 lb IRA car bomb exploded outside the RUC station in Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, injuring 10 civilians and causing substantial damage to civilian properties nearby and structural damage to the security base itself.

9th May 1992: A number of incendiary devices exploded at the Metro Centre in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, causing some damage.

9th May 1992: An IRA bomb exploded accidentally in Mullaghbawn, County Armagh, injuring the IRA volunteer who was assembling it.

12th May 1992: A British Army paratrooper lost both legs after an IRA bomb attack near Cappagh, County Tyrone. The incident triggered a series of clashes between British soldiers and local people in the town of Coalisland, which lasted until 17th May, when an army machine gun was stolen. Unionist officials accused Sinn Féin of being the instigators of the riots. At least three civilians and two soldiers were injured.

2nd June 1992: An IRA unit carried out a mortar attack on a British Army checkpoint at Mullan Bridge, Kinawley, County Fermanagh.

7th June 1992: A British Police officer, Glenn Goodman, was shot dead after he stopped the car of an IRA volunteer on the A64 at Tadcaster, North Yorkshire, England. Another officer was shot and badly wounded. IRA volunteers Paul Magee and Michael O’Brien were caught four days later. Paul Magee was charged and found guilt for the murder, while O’Brien was found guilty of attempted murder. On the same day an IRA bomb exploded at the Royal Festival Hall in London.

10th June 1992: A small IRA bomb exploded in Wilcox Place, London.

15th June 1992: An IRA bomb exploded in a hijacked minicab in St. Albans.

21st June 1992: An IRA semtex blast bomb was thrown to an RUC patrol during a festival in Benburb, County Tyrone.

22nd June 1992: A British army patrol was fired upon and near missed by an IRA sniper in the town of Cookstown, County Tyrone.

25th June 1992: An IRA briefcase-bomb exploded under a car in Coleman Street, London. A police officer had to be treated for shock.

27th June 1992: An IRA bomb injured 21 people in the center of Belfast.

30th July 1992: Two incendiary devices exploded in Milton Keynes causing minimal damage.

2nd August 1992: A British soldier was injured in a gun battle with the IRA in Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

3rd August 1992: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper team in the New Lodge area of Belfast. The soldier was in the back of an army Land Rover when an IRA sniper fired from a block of flats, hitting the soldier in the chest.

( 10th August 1992: Rfn Jamie Smith,  RTA )

20th August 1992: Two British soldiers were wounded in an IRA attack at Grosvenor road, Belfast.

21st August 1992: A civilian was shot dead in a crossfire by the IRA during a gun battle in Ardoyne with the RUC. The IRA issued a statement after the attack in which it apologised for the killing.

25th August 1992: An IRA firebomb exploded in the Shropshire Regimental museum in Shrewsbury Castle, Shropshire, England and two incendiary devices exploded in two furniture shops in Shrewsbury Town Centre.

27th August 1992: An unsuccessful one-shot attack was launched by the IRA’s South Armagh sniper on a British Army patrol at Carran Road, Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

28th August 1992: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper in the main square of Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The soldier was taking up position in the main square of the town when he was hit in the chest by a single bullet fired by an IRA sniper 250 yards away.

6th September 1992: A small IRA bomb exploded at the Hilton hotel in London.

17th September 1992: One bomb and four firebombs exploded at various locations around London.

23rd September 1992: A massive 3,500 lb (1,600 kg) IRA truck-bomb exploded outside the Forensic Science Laboratory at Newtownbreda in south Belfast. The device almost completely demolished the Laboratory and damaged 1,002 homes in the surrounding area. The tremors from the blast were felt over 12 miles (19 km) away and the bomb was later assessed as probably the largest device ever detonated in Northern Ireland. There were no injuries in the attack as the IRA had given a 40-minute warning to evacuate the area, although hundreds of residents had to be treated for shock. It was described as being as powerful as a “mini-nuke”. The army bomb disposal team who were attempting to defuse it all suffered deafness, and several military vehicles were damaged.

30th September 1992: A UDA member was shot dead by the IRA in the Ballynafeigh area of Belfast.

1st October 1992: A 15-men strong IRA unit, armed with rifles and machine guns, set up several checkpoints around the village of Meigh, County Armagh.

7th October 1992: Five people were injured when an IRA bomb exploded in Piccadilly, London. Another bomb also exploded on Flitcroft street in London.

8th October 1992: One person was injured when an IRA bomb exploded underneath a car in Tooley Street, London. Another bomb exploded on Malcombe Street.

9th October 1992: An IRA bomb exploded in the carpark of the Royal British Legion building in Southgate, England.

9th October 1992: Two explosive devices blew up outside two shops at Dungannon, County Tyrone, destroying both buildings. Another bomb exploded outside a bank in Belfast, causing minor damage.

10th October 1992: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in the Monico Bar, Lombard Street, Belfast. In England, the IRA bombed Paddington Green police station, injuring one person.

12th October 1992: An explosive device exploded in a toilet of the Sussex Arms public house in Covent Garden killing one person and injuring four others.

19th October 1992: An IRA bomb explodes in Oxenden Street London, leaving two people requiring treatment for shock.

20th October 1992: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Rasharkin, County Antrim. The soldier was said to have been a close friend of DUP leader Ian Paisley.

21st October 1992: Three people were injured when the IRA detonate a bomb at Princess Louise Territorial Army Centre, Hammersmith Road, London. Two more people were wounded when the IRA bomb a railway line in Edmonton, England.

21st October 1992: The IRA detonated a 200 lb (91 kg) carbomb on the Main Street of Bangor, County Down.

22nd October 1992: A sewage pipe is damaged by an IRA explosive device at Wick Lane, London.

25th October 1992: A small IRA bomb explodes in London damaging one building and a number of vehicles.

( 29th October 1992: Rfn Richard Davey, Death by violent or unnatural causes. )

30th October 1992: A small IRA bomb explodes outside 10 Downing Street, the residence of the British Prime Minister.

31st October 1992: The IRA wiped out the IPLO in Belfast after a vicious internal IPLO feud and allegations that it was dealing drugs. The leader of the IPLO’s breakaway Belfast Brigade, Sammy Ward, was shot dead in the Short Strand and several other high-ranking members were kneecapped. Their lives were spared on condition that the IPLO surrender and disband immediately. Within a few days both IPLO factions surrendered and disbanded. IPLO units in Newry and Armagh were not attacked and absolved of any involvement in criminality or drug dealing by the IRA.

13th November 1992: The IRA detonated a van-bomb in the centre of Coleraine, County Londonderry, causing extensive damage to the town centre.

14th November 1992: A British Police officer was shot and injured by the IRA in London after confronting two men he had spotted acting suspiciously. The two men fled the seen and in a follow up search a truck-bomb was discovered and defused.

15th November 1992: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while manning a vehicle checkpoint in Belcoo, County Fermanagh. It emerged that the sniper used an AK-47 assault rifle equipped with a night-sight and fired a single shot from high ground on the Donegal side of the border.

19th November 1992: An off-duty British soldier was shot dead in Portadown, County Armagh. He was shot at least 12 times by an IRA volunteer who fired at close range. The soldier managed to return fire but it is not believed he hit anybody.

21st November 1992: An alleged informer was shot dead by the IRA at Creggan, County Londonderry.

24th November 1992: An IRA unit exchanged fire with a combined British Army/RUC patrol at Castlederg, County Tyrone. The unit had been surprised outside the house of a Royal Irish Regiment soldier. More than 70 shots were fired.

24th November 1992: Four RUC members were injured in Belfast by an IRA jar-bomb.

25th November 1992: IRA volunteer Pearse Jordan was shot dead by the RUC after his car was rammed by an undercover RUC vehicle in Belfast. After stumbling out of the car unarmed, Jordan was shot three times in the back by an RUC sergeant. In May 2001, Jordan’s case was heard by the European Court of Human Rights along with three similar cases. The Court agreed that Jordan’s death was in violation of Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights
1st December 1992: An IRA van-bomb was made safe by the British Army in London after a telephoned warning. In Belfast two IRA bombs exploded injuring 27 people, and an IRA unit fired a rocket at a British Army outpost on a Belfast’s high-rise.

2nd December 1992: British Police managed to disarm and IRA van bomb which was left London’s West End.

4th December 1992: The IRA detonated two small bombs in Manchester, England; 64 people were injured.

7th December 1992: The first barrack buster mortar was launched against an RUC base in Ballygawley, County Tyrone.

9th December 1992: The IRA detonated two car-bombs on King Street, Belfast City centre. In London an IRA truck-bomb partially explodes in Woodside Park.

10th December 1992: Two IRA bombs explode at Wood Green shopping centre in London injuring 11 people.

13th December 1992: An IRA unit fired at British troops in Annaghmartin, County Fermanagh. The RUC base there was also mortared.

13th December 1992: A British Army observation tower was hit by an IRA mortar round in Crossmaglen.

13th December 1992: The IRA attacked Oldpark RUC station in Belfast.

18th December 1992: The RUC base at Markethill, County Armagh, was damaged by an IRA mortar attack.

21st December 1992: A small IRA bomb exploded at Hampstead underground station in England. There were no injuries.

22nd December 1992: A soldier was given a box of chocolates by a female motorist at a checkpoint in Cookstown, County Tyrone. Later, British Army experts found and defused a 1 kg Semtex device inside. The IRA is suspected.

24th December 1992: The IRA called a three-day ceasefire.

28th December 1992: The IRA’s three-day ceasefire ended.

30th December 1992: A British soldier was shot dead at his home in the Cavehill Road area of Belfast. Two IRA volunteers burst into the house armed with AK-47 assault rifles and shot the soldier at least 13 times at close range. The soldiers wife claimed that IRA volunteer Thomas Begley was one of the gunmen.

Sourced from Wikipedia

Northern Ireland Part Three (1982–1987)

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Mar 262015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

1982 to 1987

8th January 1982: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while working at a petrol station on the Antrim Road, Belfast.

19th January 1982: John Torbitt, an alleged informant, was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Lenadoon, Belfast.

5th March 1982: Seamus Morgan, an alleged inofrmant, was shot dead by the IRA in Forkhill, County Armagh.

15th March 1982: The IRA detonated a large car-bomb on Bridge Street, Banbridge, County Down following a warning to evacuate the area. One civilian was killed.

23rd March 1982: A British coal ship, the St. Bedan, was bombed and sunk by an IRA unit while at anchor in Lough Foyle.

25th March 1982: Rfn Daniel Holland, Rfn Nicholas Malakos, Rfn Anthony Rapley.  A mobile patrol was escorting an RAF Sgt from Springfield Road RUC to North Howard Street Mill. The IRA had taken over a house in Cavendish St, holding an 81 year-old woman, her daughter and son-in-law hostage for 11 hours before the attack. A firing point was set up by the gunmen and as the two rovers left the station and drove into Cavendish St, they opened fire with assault rifles and an M-60 machine gun. As they came under heavy fire the front vehicle sped away; fire-fight was then switched to the second vehicle which stopped. Rfn Rapley was killed instantly; Rfn Holland and Rfn Malakos died later of their injuries. The RAF Sgt and four civilians were also injured in this attack. For bravery shown the lead vehicle driver, a corporal, was awarded the Military Medal for his action in assaulting the occupied house, a booby-trap device was later defused from the rear of the house.

28th March 1982: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Patrick Street, Derry.

1st April 1982: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA sniper ambush outside Rosemount British Army base in Derry. Both soldiers were traveling in a British Army van when they came under fire.

2nd April 1982: An RUC officer was badly wounded in a gun attack on New Barnsley RUC Station in West Belfast. The officer died of his injuries on 16th April.

20th April 1982: The IRA launched a massive bombing offensive in Northern Ireland. A bank in Strabane was hit by a 900 kg carbomb; a garage and car showroom in Armagh was destroyed by three firebombs; a car bomb exploded at the Linen Hall in Ballymena; a 900 kg carbomb exploded in Derry and another 900 kg device was detonated in Bessbrook followed by a smaller 40 kg device which detonated in Bessbrook some hours later, and finally another carbombing in Magherafelt.

27th April 1982: A UDR soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun attack in Lisnagelvin, Derry.

30th April 1982: A British soldier was killed when the vehicle he was travelling in struck an IRA landmine in Belleek, County Fermanagh.

4th May 1982: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack in The Diamond area of Derry.

12th May 1982: – Thomas Cunningham, ex-UDR soldier, shot dead in Fountain Park, Strabane.

11th June 1982: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in the Shantallow area of Derry.

15th June 1982: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Strabane, County Tyrone.

4453020th July 1982: The Hyde Park and Regents Park bombings: In Hyde Park, a bomb killed two members of the British Army’s Household Cavalry performing ceremonial duties in the park, and seven of their horses were also killed. Another device exploded underneath a bandstand in Regent’s Park, killing seven bandsmen from the British Army’s Royal Green Jackets  ( WOI. G.Barker, Bdsm. J.Heritage, SJT. R.Livinstone, Cpl. J.McKnight, Bdsm. G.Mesure, Bdsm. K.Powell, Bdsm. L.Smith,) as they played music to spectators.

27th July 1982: IRA volunteers fired machine-guns and a rocket at two RUC landrovers from an occupied house in West Belfast. Four RUC officers were hurt.

28th August 1982: Twenty-four buses were firebombed by the IRA at the Ulsterbus depot in County Armagh.

20th September 1982: A British soldier was killed when an IRA unit fired a rocket at his observation post at Springfield Road British Army barracks in Belfast.

1st October 1982: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Drum Manor, Tyrone.

14th October 1982: The IRA carried out a bomb attack on a British Army foot-patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

22th October 1982: An off-duty UDR soldier was kidnapped in Glenanne, County Armagh. He was shot dead and his body was found on 29th October at Lislea, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

27th October 1982: Three RUC officers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their patrol vehicle at Oxford Island, County Armagh.

30th October 1982: An IRA rocket hit an armoured vehicle carrying 12 British soldiers and RUC officers on Lower Falls Road, Belfast. No injuries were reported.

9th November 1982: An RUC officer and a civilian were killed in an IRA bomb attack in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.

10th November 1982: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA shortly after leaving the Customs Office in Armagh town. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

11th November 1982: Three IRA volunteers were shot dead in an undercover RUC ambush in Craigavon, County Armagh.

16th November 1982: The IRA killed UVF leader Lenny Murphy outside his girlfriend’s house in Forthriver Park, Belfast. Murphy, who had been responsible for up to 20 sectarian killings which were carried out by his Shankill Butchers gang, was shot over 20 times at close range by two IRA volunteers.

19th December 1982: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA on Windmill Avenue, Armagh town.

1983

6th January 1983: Two RUC officers were shot dead by the IRA while on patrol in Rostrevor, County Down.

16th January 1983: William Doyle, a judge, was shot dead by the IRA in Belfast.

18th January 1983: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA at a supermarket in Derry.

19th February 1983: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA near Enniskillen, Fermanagh. He had been mistaken for an off-duty British soldier.

20th February 1983: An RUC officer was killed by the IRA in a drive-by shooting at Warrenpoint RUC barracks.

21st February 1983: An RUC officer on foot-patrol was killed by an IRA remote-controlled bomb attack on Lower English Street, Armagh town.

25th February 1983: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his workplace in Ballygawley, Tyrone.

2nd March 1983: A female RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while she was on foot-patrol in the Greencastle area of Belfast.

15th March 1983: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA on Tandragee Road, Newry.[39] He was also a member of the Orange Order.

17th March 1983: The IRA launched a gun and rocket attack on a British mobile patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

18th March 1983: The IRA badly wounded a British soldier after his Saracen armoured vehicle was hit with an IRA rocket in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. The vehicle was then sprayed with machine gun fire before the IRA unit made its escape.

31st March 1983: The IRA carried out a bomb attack on a British patrol in the Falls area of Belfast. One British soldier was badly injured and died of his wounds eight days later.

9th April 1983: A British soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Omagh, Tyrone.

( 10th April 1983: Rfn David Grainger Thought to have been shot by IRA in Belleek )

13th April 1983: An off-duty British Territorial Army soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Keady, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

16th May 1983: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Belfast.

24th May 1983: Andersonstown British Army barracks was devastated when the IRA detonated a massive van-bomb outside the front gate.

10th June 1983: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a bomb hidden in a lamp-post as a British Army foot patrol passed in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

13th July 1983: Four UDR soldiers were killed when their vehicle struck an IRA landmine near Ballygawley, County Tyrone.

10th August 1983: Fort Pegasus British Army base in Belfast came under heavy machine gun fire from a number of IRA units. On the Whiterock road a British Army land-rover was hit by IRA sniper fire.

23rd August 1983: An off duty UDR soldier was shot dead as he left his workplace in Strabane, County Tyrone.

24th August 1983: A shopkeeper was shot dead after an altercation with an IRA unit in Derry.

25th September 1983: 38 IRA prisoners took part in the Maze Prison escape. One guard died of a heart attack during the escape, and six others were shot or stabbed.

6th October 1983: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA ambush in Downpatrick, County Down.

10th October 1983: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Newry. He had been mistaken for an off-duty RUC officer.

15th October 1983: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a bomb as a British mobile patrol passed in the Creggan area of Derry.

24th October 1983: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Aughnacloy, Tyrone.

28th October 1983: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Derry.

4th November 1983: The IRA detonated a time-bomb in the ceiling of a classroom in Jordanstown College. Two of the three RUC officers giving a lecture at the time died instantly, another died of his injuries several months later.

5th November 1983: An off duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Rasharkin, County Antrim.

7th November 1983: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

10th November 1983: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA gun attack in Ballymartin, County Down.

12th November 1983: An RUC officer was killed and several others injured when the IRA mortared Carrickmore British Army and RUC base.

14th November 1983: Charles Armstrong–who was a UDR soldier, an Orangeman and an Ulster Unionist Party councillor–was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to his car outside the District Council offices in Armagh town.

4th December 1983: Two unarmed IRA volunteers, Colm McGirr (23) and Brian Campbell (19) were shot dead by the British Army in Coalisland, Tyrone.

7th December 1983: An Ulster Unionist Party MLA was shot dead outside Queens University Belfast.

10th December 1983: An IRA bomb exploded at the Royal Artillery Barracks in London, injuring three people.

16th December 1983: An Irish Army soldier and a Garda officer were shot dead during a gun battle with the IRA in Ballinamore, County Leitrim in an attempt to free Don Tidey who had been taken hostage by an IRA unit which included Bik McFarlane.

17th December 1983: The Harrods bombing in London killed six people including three police officers, and injured 75 other people. On the same day the IRA shot dead a UDR soldier in Maghera, County Londonderry.

26th December 1983: The IRA was blamed for a bombing in London which later was revealed to be the result of the Abu Nidal Organisation.

1984

Brighton’s Grand Hotel after the IRA bomb attack in October 1984 which nearly wiped out the entire British government.

2nd January 1984: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Castlederg, County Tyrone.

10th January 1984: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Newry.

31st January 1984: Two RUC officers were killed in an IRA land mine attack on their armoured patrol car, near Forkill, County Armagh.

10th February 1984: An IRA unit fired a rocket at a British Army Saracen armoured vehicle in Glenalina Park, Belfast. The rocket bounced off the front of the vehicle and landed in a school. Nobody was injured.

21st February 1984: Two IRA volunteers and an SAS member were killed in a gun battle between an undercover British Army unit and the IRA at Dunloy, County Antrim.

2nd March 1984: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack near Castlederg, County Tyrone.

3rd March 1984: A civilian was killed by a booby-trap bomb attached to a garage door at his workplace on Alexander Road, Armagh town. The IRA claimed responsibility and said he was a serving member of the UDR. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

6th March 1984:William McConnell, then Assistant Governor of the Maze Prison, was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in east Belfast.

8th March 1984: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Moira, County Down.

22nd March 1984: The IRA exploded three bombs in buildings in the centre of Belfast.

27th March 1984: A British soldier was killed in an IRA van-bomb attack in Derry.

8th April 1984: An IRA unit carried out a gun attack on Thomas Travers, then a Resident Magistrate, outside St Brigid’s Catholic Church in Belfast. Travers was badly injured in the attack but his daughter Mary Travers was shot dead.

11th April 1984: A former UDR soldier was badly injured when a bomb exploded underneath his car in Belfast.

14th April 1984: A British soldier was badly injured when he was shot in the face by IRA volunteers in an attack in Glassdrummond in south County Armagh.

16th April 1984: The IRA shot and badly injured a civilian in Derry City. They later apologised saying that he was mistaken for an undercover British soldier.

21st April 1984: An IRA unit launched a bomb attack against a British patrol in Derry City. Three British soldiers were injured and IRA volunteer Richard Quigley (22) was killed when he was struck by shrapnel from the explosion.

23rd April 1984: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Derry. Petrol bombers had dropped sweet-jars filled with petrol on two army landrovers. As the soldiers began fleeing the IRA opened fire, injuring six.

8th May 1984: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon.

9th May 1984: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Newry.

12th May 1984: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while off-duty at his farm in Lismore, County Tyrone.

18th May 1984: Two RUC officers were killed when the IRA exploded a landmine as their armoured patrol car travelled near Camlough, County Armagh. One of the officers was also a member of the Orange Order.

18th May 1984: Two off duty British soldiers were killed, and another died later as a result of injuries, after the IRA planted a booby trap bomb under their car in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.

21st May 1984: A British patrol came under IRA sniper attack in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

29th May 1985: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack near Crossmaglen, County Armagh. An IRA bomb on the Whiterock Road in Belfast was defused by the British Army.

4th June 1984: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Lurgan, County Armagh.

9th June 1984: Alleged criminal James Campbell was shot dead by the IRA in Conway Street, Belfast.

11th June 1984: A taxi-driver and former UDR soldier was lured and shot dead by the Provisionals’ East Tyrone Brigade off the main Omagh to Cookstown road. RUC detectives believe that the tax-driver died in a burst of automatic fire and his foot jammed on the accelerator, sending the car crashing into a gate post, where his body was found.

22th June 1984: A British soldier was badly injured when he was shot in the neck by an IRA sniper on the Whiterock Road in Belfast.

2nd July 1984: An IRA unit fired an RPG7 rocket at an RUC landrover patrol but missed in Ballygawley, County Tyrone.

13th July 1984: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army during a bomb attack in Ardboe, County Tyrone.

14th July 1984: Two UDR soldiers among an eight-member foot patrol were killed in a 200 lb (91 kg) IRA landmine attack near the border at Castlederg, County Tyrone. Detectives believed that the bomb was triggered just a few hundred yards across the border. Immediately after the explosion, gunmen opened fire on the foot patrol as colleagues radioed for help. The West Tyrone Brigade of the IRA claimed responsibility for the attack.

10th August 1984: A Garda officer was shot dead by the IRA in County Meath during an attempted armed robbery of a post office.

12th August 1984: One RUC officer was killed in a land mine attack on an RUC mobile patrol, Crockanboy, Greencastle, County Tyrone.

7th September 1984: One UDR soldier and a Protestant civilian were killed in an IRA attack in County Tyrone.

12th October 1984: Brighton hotel bombing: a bomb in the Grand Hotel killed five in a failed attempt to assassinate members of the British cabinet. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher narrowly escaped death. Several others including Margaret Tebbit, wife of Norman Tebbit, were left permanently disabled.

19th October 1984: Gunner Timothy Utteridge, A member of the Royal Horse Artillery on attachment to the 3rd Battalion of Royal Green Jackets was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol on Norglen Road, Turf Lodge, Belfast.

2nd December 1984: Two IRA volunteers and one SAS member were killed in an exchange of fire after an attempted bombing in Kesh, County Fermanagh.

6th December 1984: Two members of the IRA were shot dead by undercover British soldiers in the grounds of Gransha Hospital, Derry.

17th December 1984: IRA volunteer Sean McIlvenna was killed by the RUC after carrying out a bomb attack against a British Army patrol.

1985

1st February 1985: The IRA shot dead a member of the British Army’s UDR regiment in Derrylin, County Fermanagh. The soldier was driving a bus at the time when an IRA volunteer shot him seven times through the front windscreen. Two other gunmen then entered the bus and shot him a further 24 times at point blank range. Ulster Unionist MP Ken Maginnis claimed that this was a “genocide – a conscious effort by the IRA to systematically wipe out Protestant families in the community”. His statement was in relation to the fact that two of the soldier’s brothers, who were also British soldiers, had been killed by the IRA in 1981.

17th February 1985: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA in Armagh town. The man was leaving Saint Patrick’s Cathedral when he was shot three times in the head at point-blank range.

21st February 1985: An RUC officer was killed when the IRA ambushed an RUC vehicle at Drumsallen, near Armagh town. Three gunmen attacked the vehicle with machine guns. They had taken over a house on the road and had been lying in wait. The IRA unit fired 36 shots.

23rd February 1985: Charles Breslin and two other IRA volunteers were shot dead in a British Army/SAS ambush in Strabane. Two other IRA volunteers managed to escape. The men were returning weapons to an arms dump when they were shot.

23rd February 1985: A civilian from Derry was shot dead by the IRA. They claimed he was a British informant.

28th February 1985: An IRA unit launched a devastating mortar attack on an RUC base in Newry. Nine officers (including a Chief Inspector) were killed while 37 people (including civilians) were injured.

28th February 1985: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack while on patrol in Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

3rd March 1985: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Enniskillen. The officer was exiting his vehicle when he was hit by a number of bullets. As he lay wounded a gunman ran up and fired a number of shots into him at point blank range.

23rd March 1985: An alleged Garda informant was shot dead by the IRA in Cork. Garda informant Sean O’Callaghan claimed in an interview with a local newspaper that he had shot the man, although he later retracted this.

27th March 1985: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack while patrolling the Divis Flats Complex in Belfast. The killing was strongly condemned by the Irish government due to the fact that the attack took place in the centre of a heavily populated high rise flat complex. In response, Gerry Adams of Sinn Féin said that:”No Irish politicians who believe in Irish independence should condemn any IRA operation which is clearly directed against the British presence, which takes adequate safeguards to avoid civilian casualties and which is geared towards securing an end to British rule in Ireland. The responsibility for the death of the British soldier rests with the British government. That government is aided and abetted by Mr Barry [Irish foreign Minister] and his cronies in the Dublin administration.

29th March 1985: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while working in a garage in Rathfriland, County Down. Two gunmen approached him and shot him three times at point blank range before escaping.

3rd April 1985: The IRA detonated a car-bomb outside Newry Courthouse killing an RUC officer and a security officer employed at the court.

3rd May 1985: The IRA shot dead a former Ulster Special Constabulary officer at his home in Leitrim, County Down. The IRA claimed that the man was currently an RUC Reservist and that he had been seen regularly at roadblocks. However, the RUC denied this.

20th May 1985: Four RUC officers were killed by an IRA remote-controlled bomb in Killeen, County Armagh. The officers were part of a police escort for an armoured car, which was transporting £2 million from Dublin to Belfast. The escort had just met the security van on the border when the first armour plated RUC vehicle was hit by a 1,000 lb (450 kg) roadside bomb. The vehicle was completely destroyed.

28th May 1985: A civilian who had just applied to join the RUC was shot dead by the IRA in Millfield, Belfast.

14th June 1985: A 1,000 lb (450 kg) IRA bomb exploded in the centre of Belfast causing severe damage.

15th June 1985: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA gun attack in Derry. The officer was sitting in his vehcile when an IRA volunteer fired through the windscreen with a revolver. The IRA man then opened the driver seat door and beat the officer over the head with the revolver before shooting him again at point blank range.

18th June 1985: An undercover RUC officer was killed after his patrol vehicle struck an IRA landmine in Kinawley, Fermanagh. Another RUC officer was badly injured.

23rd June 1985: Four mortars exploded in Crossmaglen British Army base, although no injuries were reported. The IRA claimed responsibility.

2nd July 1985: Fort Pegasus British Army base in Belfast was mortared by an IRA unit. The barracks kitchen was hit by an IRA missile and completely destroyed although it was empty at the time.

6th August 1985: IRA volunteer Charlie English (21) was killed during an engagement with an RUC patrol in Derry. He was killed when a home made rocket launcher jammed and then exploded as he tried to fire it. Another IRA volunteer was injured but managed to escape.

7th August 1985:The first of four Libyan shipments of weaponry to the IRA is landed by the trawler Casamara at Clogga Strand, near Wiklow, Republic of Ireland, with 10 tonnes of weaponry consisting of AK-47 rifles, RPG launchers, hand grenades, revolvers and ammunition. Another 14 tonnes were delivered on 2nd October.

20th August 1985: A civilian who worked as a contractor to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Donnybrook, Dublin. The man’s family owned Roughan Castle and a 300-acre (1.2 km2) estate outside Coalisland. The IRA said he was killed because he supplied building materials to British forces. The IRA also said they had given him warnings by telephone, letter and even through an attack on his estate.

20th August 1985: A van fitted with mortar launchers exploded 100 yards from an RUC base in Newcastle, County Down. The mortars had malfunctioned. Four people were hurt.

22nd August: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Strabane. He was mistaken for a British Army contractor. The IRA admitted responsibility for the attack and extended “deepest sympathy to the family and friends of Kieran Murray”. The dead man had aided Sinn Féin in local elections.

24th August 1985: A civilian was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Pomeroy, Tyrone. The car he was traveling in had been mistaken for that of an undercover RUC officer.

31st August 1985: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Crossgar, County Down. Sinn Féin objected to the decision of Down district council to adjourn during the RUC mans funeral as a mark of respect. In a statement the Sinn Féin councillors said: “We feel if the council is going to do this sort of thing then they should do it for all those who have lost their lives due to British occupation, and not just a select few.”

4th September 1985: The IRA launched a mortar attack against Enniskillen RUC training centre. The compound was almost completely destroyed.

8th September 1985: Two civilians were found shot dead in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast. The IRA claim the couple were British Army agents and that they had been responsible for the capture of a 30 lb (14 kg) bomb and the arrests of three INLA members. Ex-members of the British Military have confirmed that the couple were recruited by the Special Branch.

22nd September 1985: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Derry. The soldier was off-duty and returning from a disco when he was shot six times in the head by an IRA volunteer. Another soldier escaped uninjured.

7th October 1985: A civilian was shot dead in Strabane by the IRA. The IRA claim he was an informant and that he had admitted to working for the police for 13 months while under interrogation. It claimed he had provided the SAS with intelligence which resulted in the deaths of three IRA volunteers in an ambush earlier that year. The three IRA volunteers had been killed in a field overlooking his home.

7th October 1985: A British army base in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast was mortared by an IRA unit. The attack caused serious structural damage to the base and blew a large hole in the perimeter.

15th November 1985: An RUC officer was killed and another badly wounded in an IRA landmine near Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The officer was part of a joint RUC/British Army patrol which had been deployed by helicopter into the area around Crossmaglen.

18th November 1985: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Waterside area of Derry.

21st November: A contractor to the British Army was shot dead outside his home in Derry City. The man was shot 15 times as he was about to drive to work.

29th November 1985: A UDR soldier, who was also employed as a contractor to the Royal Air Force, was killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb which had been attached to his car in Kilkeel, County Down.

30th November 1985: Alleged criminal Edward Taggart was shot dead by the IRA in the Divis Flats complex in Belfast. The man was shot in the back and both legs. The dead mans family admitted he had been involved in joyriding activities and he had previously been imprisoned for joyriding offences.

7th December 1985: In an attack on the RUC barracks in Ballygawley the IRA killed two RUC officers and destroyed the barracks with a large bomb. IRA volunteers had been lying in wait outside the barracks and, as the officers left, two gunmen stepped out of concealed positions and shot both officers in the head from close range. Another IRA unit then directed heavy machine-gun fire at the front of the barracks, which provided cover for a bomb team to plant a 100 lb (45 kg) bomb inside. The bomb exploded ten minutes later, destroying the barracks. Three other RUC officers who were in the building fled through a back door. One of the dead policemen was also a Methodist preacher.

11th December 1985: The IRA claimed responsibility for mortaring Tynan RUC base, County Armagh. Four RUC officers were hurt.

19th December 1985: The RUC base in Castlederg, County Tyrone, was wrecked by a shell during a mortar attack carried out by the IRA. Seven people were injured, and about 250 families evacuated.

1986

1st January 1986: Two RUC officers were killed when the IRA detonated a remote-controlled bomb hidden in a litter bin as their patrol passed on Thomas Street, Armagh town.

15th January 1986: A UDR soldier was killed when he triggered an IRA booby trap which had been attached to his car in Castlederg, County Tyrone.

3rd February 1986: A UDR soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a remote-controlled bomb hidden in a dry stone wall as a British Army foot patrol passed in Belcoo, County Fermanagh.

11th February 1986: An RUC Detective-Constable and a civilian were killed in an IRA gun attack in Maguiresbridge, County Fermanagh. An IRA bomb exploded at the scene 40 minutes later.

22nd February 1986: An IRA active service unit launched a sniper attack on a Fort George British Army base in Derry. In the gun-battle which followed IRA volunteer Anthony Gough was killed and another IRA volunteer was captured.

18th March 1986: Rfn David Mulley was killed and several others wounded when the IRA detonated a booby-trap bomb concealed in a derelict building as a British Army foot patrol passed by in Castlewellan, County Down.

26th March: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while off duty near Omagh, County Tyrone. A lone IRA volunteer, who was not wearing a mask, approached him and shot him a number of times.

8th April 1986: A UDR soldier was killed when he triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb which had been attached to his car near Castlederg, County Tyrone.

23rd April 1986: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Newcastle, County Down. IRA volunteers opened fire on him from a wooded area on the opposite side of the road, hitting him a number of times. As he lay wounded they ran across the road and shot him at point blank range in the head.

26th April 1986: The Special Air Service (SAS) killed IRA volunteer Séamus McElwaine in Roslea, County Fermanagh. At an inquest held in 1993, McElwaine was found to have been unlawfully killed. He had been shot in the back after being handcuffed. Another IRA volunteer was wounded and arrested.

12th May 1986: Three British Army bases in west Belfast were targeted in IRA grenade attacks.

15th May: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Newry. He was driving his delivery vehicle when a motorcycle pulled up alongside and the pillion passenger opened fire, hitting the man 15 times with low-velocity bullets.

17th May 1986: A civilian was shot dead near Dungannon. The man was ambushed as he drove his pick-up van. Over 30 shots were fired through the windscreen. The IRA claimed the man was a member of the British Army’s UDR Regiment but they did not claim responsibility for the killing. Later a caller from the Catholic Reaction Force claimed they were responsible for the killing although many have speculated that the IRA was involved. The dead man was a member of the Orange Order.

20th May 1986: The IRA kidnapped and killed a civilian in Killeen, County Armagh. The IRA claimed he was a local criminal and had been “given a free hand by the RUC in exchange for information on republicans in the area”. The RUC refused to comment on the allegations. He had been ordered to leave south Armagh by the IRA in 1979 but later returned.

22nd May 1986: Two RUC officers and a British soldier were killed in an IRA remote-controlled bomb attack in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

25th May 1986: A civilian was found shot dead on the side of a road outside Castlederg. The IRA claimed he was a British informer and had previously been associated with the OIRA and was involved in a bomb attack which killed two civilian employees at a British Army base in Derry.

28th May 1986: A UDR soldier and his sniffer dog were killed and another soldier wounded in an IRA bomb attack in Kilkeel, County Down. The soldiers were searching for a bomb which the IRA had claimed they left in the area when the sniffer dog nudged an oil drum which contained a booby trapped mercury tilt switch device.

16th June 1986: A civilian contractor to the British Army was kidnapped by the IRA and found shot dead near Cullyhanna, County Armagh. The man had previously been warned to cease working for the British Army. He was found with two bullet wounds to his head and one to his neck.

1st July 1986: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Drumaness, County Down.

8th July: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA at his farm in Rosslea, County Fermanagh. The man had been a member of the Orange Order. At his funeral, the local Church of Ireland minister claimed Protestants in Fermanagh were under siege.

9th July 1986: Two British soldiers were killed and two others injured when the IRA detonated a large car-bomb as a British Army foot-patrol passed near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

10th July 1986: The oil-rig replenisher Villa landed 14 tonnes of weaponry and explosives smuggled by the IRA from Libya off the Clogga Strand, near Wicklow, by inflatable boats. The same ship repeated the operation in October, this time by landing an 80 tonnes cache which included one tonne of Semtex, reportedly ten SAM-7 missiles, more RPG-7s, AK-47s and hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunition.

26th July 1986: Three RUC officers were killed when IRA volunteers opened fire on an a stationary armoured patrol car from close range in Newry. The IRA unit fired six shots into the car through an open door. They then threw a grenade into the car although it did not explode as the pin had not been fully pulled out.

30th July 1986: A civilian contractor to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA in Greencastle, County Tyrone.

4th August 1986: A British patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast was attacked by an IRA unit using blast-bombs.

4th August 1986: A UDR soldier was shot dead at his home in the Shankill area of Belfast by the IRA. A two man IRA unit was seen running up the street towards the man firing. They continued firing as he lay on the ground wounded before making their getaway.

11th August 1986: An IRA unit destroyed an RUC base at the Birches near Portadown, County Armagh. The unit drove a digger through the perimeter fence with a 200 lb bomb attached to the bucket. Some members of this unit would be killed the next year by the SAS during a similar attack on Loughgall RUC base.

15th August 1986: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in the Clonard area of Belfast. The IRA claimed he was a British informer. The IRA said he had previously been a member of their organisation and that he was being paid by the RUC to work as an informer.

28th August 1986: A civilian contractor to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA in Derry. The IRA denied claims that the killing was sectarian stating: “The man’s religion is of no interest to us. Despite previous warnings he continued to work for the UDR, and that was the reason he was targeted.”

10th September 1986: The IRA shot dead a man they claimed was an informer in Lurgan. The IRA claimed he had been a member of their organisation but had become an informer in 1982 after he was arrested in connection with the bombing of Lurgan Golf Club.

14th September 1986: High-ranking UVF member John Bingham, who was suspected of involvement in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings[115] was shot dead by the IRA at his home in the Ballysillan area of Belfast. Two IRA men, armed with a rifle and a revolver, used an axe to smash down his front door before shooting him in both legs. The UVF man managed to make his way to an upstairs bedroom before being shot three more times. The IRA later released a statement saying: “Relying on accurate intelligence reports we were able to pinpoint the whereabouts of UVF murder-gang leader John Bingham, who after a period of intensive activities which resulted in the deaths of five innocent Catholics, had just in the last number of weeks felt safe to return home.” Bingham had also been a member of the Orange Order.

14th September 1986: An RUC foot-patrol came under fire from the IRA in west Belfast.

14th September 1986: Unarmed IRA volunteer James McKernan (29) was shot in the back by the British Army in the Brenda Park area of Belfast. The man was running away from a British Army patrol after planting a booby-trap bomb nearby.

6th October 1986: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon, County Tyrone. He was killed when three bullet fragments hit him after his vehicle was fired on.

11th October 1986: An RUC officer was killed and another officer injured when the IRA mortared New Barnsley British Army base in Belfast. The constable was killed when the mortar bomb exploded just above his head. Two civilians were also slightly wounded in the attack. The other injured officer was later killed by the IRA in 1990.

24th October 1986: A civilian contractor to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA in Magherafelt, County Londonderry. The IRA said the firm had ignored repeated warnings to stop working for the security forces. A DUP MP, Willie McCrea, accused a Sinn Féin councillor of carrying out the attack.

26th October 1986: An IRA unit fired a mortar at Crossmaglen British Army base in County Armagh.

28th October 1986: An IRA unit fired seven mortars at Drummuckavall British Army watchtower in County Armagh. This is the first recorded use of Libyan-supplied Semtex high-explosive. In the aftermath, a red Ford Escort was pursued while escaping across the border towards Thomas Murphy’s farm by members of the Scots Guards. One of the guards, a Lance Corporal, broke into a shed, where he was confronted by two IRA members. The guard had inadvertently crossed the border and after a brief brawl with the two men, a Gardaí patrol arrived at the scene and arrested the soldier, for being in possession of an illegal arm. He was taken to a police station at Dundalk but was released six hours later after negotiations between senior RUC and Garda officers.

23rd November 1986: Six British soldiers were wounded after the IRA launched seven mortars at a British Army barracks in Middleton, Armagh.

27th November 1986: The IRA launched a mortar at Newry RUC base; however, the device overshot its target, landing in a nearby residential area where it wounded more than 30 people (mainly from flying glass). The IRA apologised for the incident.

12th December 1986: A civilian was killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb attached to his car. The IRA claimed he had been mistaken for an off-duty RUC officer and apologised for the killing.

16th December 1986: A bus bomb exploded outside a south Belfast RUC barracks slightly injuring seven people. The IRA claimed responsibility.

1987

2nd January 1987: Three mortars were fired from a lorry toward Crossmaglen British Army base. Forty minutes later, a timer launched another three mortars at the base.

9th January 1987: An RUC officer was killed when the IRA detonated a remote control bomb hidden in a litter bin as an RUC foot patrol passed the High Street in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. The RUC officer was also a member of the Orange Order.

26th January 1987: A British soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack in Coalisland, County Tyrone. The soldier was shot three times in the back and head by a two man IRA unit outside his home.

6th March 1987: New Barnsley RUC/British Army base in Belfast came under IRA gun attack. Meanwhile Fort Jericho British Army base, also in Belfast, was mortared by an IRA unit.

7th March 1987: An RUC riot squad were shot at by an IRA sniper in the Whiterock area of Belfast.

10th March 1987: An RUC officer was killed when the IRA detonated a remote controlled bomb at the Ardoyne Shops on the Crumlin Road in Belfast. The RUC had been lured to the area by a hoax phonecall claiming an armed robbery was in progress. The IRA had correctly anticipated which doorway the RUC would take cover in and detonated a small booby-trap bomb when they arrived. The IRA claimed his death was retaliation for “RUC brutality at republican funerals”.

13th March 1987: Two RUC officers were injured in an IRA bomb attack at Roselawn Cemetery in Belfast.

23rd March 1987: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA as he sat in his car outside Magee College. Three masked gunmen approached the front of the vehicle and fired six shots through the windscreen using a low-velocity rifle. The Prison Officer was shot in the head and died instantly. The IRA unit was then seen casually walking away. The IRA said the officer was killed in reprisal for the inhumane conditions suffered by IRA prisoners in Magilligan Prison.

23rd March 1987: 2 RUC officers were killed when the IRA detonated a briefcase bomb on the Rock Road in Derry. The officers were examining the scene of a fatal IRA gun attack on a Prison Lecturer.

23rd March: 31 people were injured in a car bomb attack at Rheindahlen Military Complex, near Mönchengladbach in Germany.

30th March 1987: A British soldier was killed in an IRA blast bomb in the Divis Flats complex of West Belfast. The bombs were dropped from the flat complex onto the roof of a passing British land rover. One of the bombs fell through a hatch in the vehicle’s roof and exploded, killing one soldier and wounding another. A Sinn Féin member was later charged for his part in the attack. Author Tony Geraghty claims that the bombs were actually Mark-6 mortar shells dropped by hand.

30th March 1987: The IRA launched a gun and grenade attack on New Barnsley RUC/British Army base in Belfast.

3rd April 1987: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Ederney, County Fermanagh.

3rd April 1987: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside Ballynahinch RUC base in County Down. Two RUC officers were leaving the base when an IRA unit fired on them from the opposite side of the road, killing one officer and wounding another.

11th April 1987: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA ambush while on foot patrol on the Main Street in Portrush, County Antrim.

12th April 1987: The IRA shot dead a man they claimed was a British informer near Killeen, County Armagh. The man’s body was found in the back of a van. His hands were tied behind his back and a plastic bag was placed over his face.

16th April 1987: Thirteen

Northern Ireland Part One (1969–1975) Northern Ireland

 Articles  Comments Off on Northern Ireland Part One (1969–1975) Northern Ireland
Mar 082015
 

These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group 

it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

P Pickford Poem MAP

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

gallery_20_2_11495 (1)

The Irish Republican Army (IRA), also called Provisional Irish Republican Army, republican paramilitary organization seeking the establishment of a republic, the end of British rule in Northern Ireland, and the reunification of Ireland.
The IRA was created in 1919 as a successor to the Irish Volunteers, a militant nationalist organization founded in 1913.

The Volunteers (also known as the Irish Volunteers) were local militias in late 18th century Ireland raised to defend Ireland from the threat of French and Spanish invasion when regular British soldiers were withdrawn from Ireland to fight abroad during the American Revolutionary War and the government failed to organise its own militia. Taking advantage of Britain’s preoccupation with its rebelling American colonies, the Volunteers were able to pressure Westminster into conceding legislative independence to the Dublin parliament. Members of the Belfast 1st Volunteer Company laid the foundations for the establishment of the United Irishmen organisation. The majority of Volunteer members however were inclined towards the yeomanry, which fought and helped defeat the United Irishmen in the Irish rebellion of 1798.

Events of the Provisional I R A actions

1969 to 1975

From the year 1969 until 1997, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) conducted an armed paramilitary campaign primarily in Northern Ireland and England, aimed at ending British rule in Northern Ireland in order to create a united Ireland.

The Provisional IRA emerged from a split in the Irish Republican Army in 1969, partly as a result of that organisation’s perceived failure to defend Catholic neighbourhoods from attack in the 1969 Northern Ireland riots. The Provisionals gained credibility from their efforts to physically defend such areas in 1970 and 1971. From 1971–72, the IRA took to the offensive and conducted a relatively high intensity campaign against the British and Northern Ireland security forces and the infrastructure of the state. The British Army characterised this period as the ‘insurgency phase’ of the IRA’s campaign.

( 24th September 1969: L/Cpl Michael Pearce.)

( 25th October 1969: Rfn Michael Boswell, Rfn John Keeney,  RTA caused by riots.)

The IRA declared a brief ceasefire in 1972 and a more protracted one in 1975, when there was an internal debate over the feasibility of future operations. The armed group reorganised itself in the late 1970s into a smaller, cell-based structure, which was designed to be harder to penetrate. The IRA now tried to carry out a smaller scale but more sustained campaign which they characterised as the ‘Long War’, with the eventual aim of weakening the British government’s resolve to remain in Ireland. The British Army called this the ‘terrorist phase’ of the IRA’s campaign. The IRA made some attempts in the 1980s to escalate the conflict with the aid of weapons imported from Libya. In the 1990s they also began a campaign of bombing economic targets in London and other cities in England.

On the 31st August 1994, the IRA called a unilateral ceasefire with the aim of having their associated political party, Sinn Féin, admitted into the Northern Ireland peace process. The organisation ended its ceasefire in February 1996 but declared another in July 1997. The IRA accepted the terms of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 as a negotiated end to the Northern Ireland conflict.

Beginnings
In the early days of the Troubles (1969–72), the Provisional IRA was poorly armed, with only a handful of old weapons left over from the IRA’s Border campaign of the 1950s. The IRA had split in December 1969 into the Provisional IRA and Official IRA factions. In the first years of the conflict, the Provisionals’ main activities were defending nationalist areas from attacks.

In contrast to the IRA’s relative inaction during the rioting of 1969, in the summer of 1970, the Provisional IRA members mounted determined armed defences of the nationalist areas of Belfast against loyalist attackers, killing a number of loyalists in the process. On the 27th June 1970, the IRA killed seven Protestants in rioting in Belfast. Three Protestants were shot in Ardoyne in north Belfast after gun battles broke out during an Orange Order parade. When loyalists retaliated by attacking the nationalist enclave of Short Strand in east Belfast, Billy McKee, the Provisionals’ commander in Belfast, occupied St Matthew’s Church and defended it in a five-hour gun battle with the loyalists (see Battle of St Matthew’s). One of his men was killed, he was badly wounded and three loyalists were also killed. The Provisional IRA gained much of its support from these activities, as they were widely perceived within the nationalist community as being defenders of nationalist and Catholic people against aggression.

Initially, the British Army, deployed into Northern Ireland in August 1969 to reinforce the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and restore government control, was welcomed in Catholic nationalist areas as a neutral force compared to the Protestant- and unionist-dominated RUC and Ulster Special Constabulary. However, this good relationship with the nationalist community did not last long. The Army was soon discredited in the eyes of many nationalists by incidents such as the Falls Curfew of July 1970, when 3,000 British troops imposed martial law conditions on the nationalist lower Falls area of west Belfast. After a gun and grenade attack on troops by Provisional IRA members, the British fired over 1,500 rounds of ammunition in gun battles with both the Official IRA and Provisional IRA in the area, killing six civilians. Thereafter, the Provisionals continued targeting British soldiers. The first soldier to die was gunner Robert Curtis, killed by Billy Reid in a gun battle in February 1971.

1970 and 1971 also saw feuding between the Provisional and Official IRAs in Belfast, as both organisations vied for supremacy in nationalist areas. Charlie Hughes, commander of the Provisionals’ D Company in the Lower Falls, was killed before a truce was brokered between the two factions.

In 2005 the organisation declared a formal end to its campaign and had its weaponry decommissioned under international supervision.

Chronology Events of the

Provisional Irish Republican Army

actions

(1969–1975)

1970

26th June 1970: Three Provisional IRA volunteers and two young girls were killed when an IRA bomb prematurely exploded in a house in Creggan, Derry.

27th June 1970: Rioting erupted in parts of north, west and east Belfast following Orange Order marches past Catholic areas. IRA volunteers used firearms to defend the Short Strand and Ardoyne from attack by loyalist gunmen and rioters. Five loyalists and one nationalist were shot dead. See Battle of St Matthew’s.

3rd–5th July 1970: Falls Curfew: A British Army raid in the Falls district of Belfast developed into a riot between soldiers and residents and then gun battles between soldiers and the ‘Official’ IRA. The Provisional IRA also attacked troops with improvised grenades. The British Army sealed-off the area, imposed a 36-hour curfew and raided hundreds of homes under the cover of CS gas. Four civilians were killed by British soldiers and more than 60 wounded.

11th  August 1970: Two Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officers were killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to an abandoned car near Crossmaglen, South Armagh. The bomb contained 20 lb (9.1 kg) of gelignite and exploded when one of the officers attempted to open one of the car’s doors.

4th September 1970: An IRA volunteer was killed when a bomb he was planting at an electricity transformer in Belfast exploded prematurely.

16th November 1970: The IRA shot dead two alleged criminals in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. The men were alleged to have been involved in protection rackets, fencing stolen goods, minor racketeering, moneylending, burglary and robbery.

1971
January 1971: Following months of clashes between British soldiers and nationalists in Ballymurphy, the British Army held secret talks with the IRA. It was agreed that, in parts of West Belfast, the IRA would be responsible for policing and there would be no activity by the British Army or RUC.

3rd February 1971: Under pressure from the Unionist government, the British Army began a series of raids in nationalist areas of West and North Belfast. This sparked clashes between nationalists and British soldiers, and between nationalists and loyalists. Eight soldiers and a number of civilians were wounded. The IRA saw the raids as a breach of the policing agreement, and violence continued for the next few nights.

6th February 1971: The British Army shot dead an IRA staff officer, James Saunders, during violence in North Belfast. The British Army claimed soldiers removing barricades in the Oldpark district came under gun and bomb attack, and that a British marksman shot dead a man holding a pistol. In nearby Ardoyne, soldiers shot dead a Catholic civilian, whom they claimed was armed, after an armoured personnel carrier was attacked.

6th February 1971: During clashes between nationalists and British soldiers in the New Lodge district, the IRA opened fire on a group of soldiers, killing Gunner Robert Curtis. He was the first British soldier killed in Ireland since the 1920s. The next day, James Chichester-Clark, Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, declared on television that “Northern Ireland is at war with the Irish Republican Army Provisionals”. An IRA volunteer was shot dead in a shootout with the British Army in the Bone area of Belfast and the British Army shot dead a Catholic civilian. Eight British soldiers and five civilians were also injured in various gun battles around Belfast.

8th February 1971: During clashes in the Ardoyne area of Belfast, two British Army scout vehicles came under sniper fire and had a bomb thrown at them. A soldier was shot in the head and died on 15th February.

9th February 1971: At the funeral of James Saunders, IRA volunteers fired a three-volley salute over his coffin. The funeral cortege was forced to make a detour when 300 loyalists blocked the Oldpark Road and stoned mourners. There were also scuffles with police. There was controversy after a British soldier was filmed saluting the coffin as it passed his armoured car.

9th February 1971: Five men were killed when their landrover was blown up by an IRA landmine at Brougher Mountain transmitting station, County Tyrone. They were on their way to inspect a transmitter: two of the dead were BBC engineers, the other three were construction workers. The landmine was intended for a British Army patrol that usually inspected the transmitters.

26th February 1971: Two RUC officers attached to the Special Patrol Group were killed in a gun battle with the IRA in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

8th March 1971: A PIRA volunteer was shot dead by the Official IRA in the Lower Falls area of Belfast. This was part of an ongoing dispute between the PIRA and the OIRA. In response the PIRA shot and seriously injured a member of the OIRA.

9th March 1971: The IRA kidnapped three off-duty Scottish soldiers in Belfast and brought them to a mountain road outside the city, lined them up, and shot each of them in the head. They were the first off-duty soldiers to be killed in the conflict.

21th April 1971: The Royal Navy survey launch Stork, attached to HMS Hecate, was towed to open seas and sunk by an IRA unit in Baltimore, Republic of Ireland.

15th May 1971: IRA volunteer Billy Reid was killed during a gun battle between the IRA and the British Army on Academy Street, Belfast. Two British soldiers were wounded in the incident.

22nd May 1971: Cpl Robert Bankier  Aged 24. (1 R.G.J.) Shot by a sniper when he left his Land-Rover to disperse some children who were blocking the road in the Markets area of Belfast, The children were covering gunmen who when the children dispersed on either side of the road opened fire down the middle killing Cpl Bankier.

25th May 1971: A bomb was thrown into Springfield Road British Army/RUC base in Belfast, killing army Sergeant Michael Willetts as he shielded civilians from the blast with his body. He was posthumously awarded the George Cross. Seven RUC officers, two British soldiers and 18 civilians were injured.

27th June 1971: The first reported and recorded IRA operations in Tyrone that involved the use of firearms occurred within a short space of time in the east and west of the county. In the first operation a number of shots were fired from a passing commandeered car at a British Army sentry on duty at Pomeroy RUC barracks. This attack occurred at around 1:30am. Shortly afterwards a British Army mobile patrol was ambushed near Victoria Bridge. No hits were reported in either incident.

12th July 1971: Rfn. David Walker. There is some ambiguity between the Lost Lives entry about David Walker’s death and the contemporary report in 39 Brigade Commanders Diary logs (Sheet 26, 12 Jul 1971). The former states that Dave was shot by a sniper. However the Bde log states that his colleague on duty reported a slow-burst of four rounds. The RMP WO1 SIB found four strikes in the walls close to where Dave fell. He told his colleague he had been hit in the back (entry wound was through his left shoulder blade). From the bullet strikes, RMP deduced the shots had come from the Percy Street area. Source material TNA 39 Airportable Brigade Commanders Diary July 1971. The IRA claimed his death was in retaliation for the killings of two civilians in Derry by the British Army the previous week. David`s murderer was killed in later years by the Parachute Regiment.

14th July 1971: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA ambush on a mobile-patrol in the Andersonstown area of Belfast. Three IRA gunmen using automatic weapons fired at least 35 shots at the patrol.

8th August 1971: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack while on foot patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast. The IRA said he was shot in retaliation for the shooting dead of a civilian by the British Army the day before on the Springfield Road.

9th August 1971: 343 suspects were detained as internment was introduced. In the following two days 17 people were killed in gun battles between the IRA and British Army. The IRA killed one British soldier and one UDR soldier while the British Army shot dead one IRA volunteer and 14 civilians. Between 1971 and 1975, 1,981 people were interned; 1,874 were Catholic/republican, while only 107 were Protestant/loyalist.

9th August 1971: A UDR soldier was killed in a joint Provisional and Official IRA ambush in Clady, County Tyrone.

9th August 1971: Cpl Kneller 1st RGJ was shot and wounded in the neck at C5/C6, whilst in a Sanger by an IRA sniper firing a Armalite .223 at the Albert Street Mill from Divis Flats, causing him life changing injuries, he was immediately Paralysed from the neck down to his feet, he then spent 3 years in Woolwich and RAF Rehabilitation Unit. Cpl Kneller was discharged from the Army as ” unsuitable” for service in 1973. During the next few day`s a number of members of the RGJ where injured or wounded. Keith now lives in Australia, he is on a full War Pension, he walks with a Limp, his Right Side crippled and difficult to use – however, he is now in his 80s and has no touch feeling down his Right Side. Despite his injuries Keith has tried to live life to the full and we wish him well. 

10th August 1971: Norman Watson, a Protestant, was killed in crossfire between the IRA and soldiers in Armagh.

11th August 1971: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while carrying out a bomb attack on their patrol in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

16th August 1971: The commander of the Provisionals’ Belfast Brigade, Joe Cahill, gave a press conference claiming only 30 IRA volunteers had been interned.

18th August 1971: An IRA volunteer was shot dead during a gun battle between the IRA and the British Army in the Creggan area of Derry City.

23rd August 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper on Flax Street in the Ardoyne area of Belfast. The soldier was shot in the head as he exited a British armoured vehicle. Another British soldier from the same regiment was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Ardoyne during a gun attack on an observation post. He had been shot in the mouth. The Daily Express published a picture of the dead soldier, George Crozier, on its front page the next day.

25th August 1971: A civilian was killed when the IRA bombed the NIES office on Malone Road in Belfast. An inadequate warning was given.

29th August 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper near Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The soldier was travelling in a British patrol consisting of two armoured vehicles when they accidentally crossed the border into County Monaghan. When attempting to turn back angry locals blocked their way and set one of the vehicles on fire. After eventually managing to get back across the border the patrol had to stop to change a damaged wheel. While this was happening a six-man unit from the IRA’s Monaghan Brigade arrived on the scene and took up sniping positions in nearby fields. One soldier was killed after being shot in the neck and another injured when he was struck in the shoulder.

31st August 1971: A British soldier was killed when he was shot by an IRA sniper in Stockmans Lane in the Andersonstown area of Belfast. A single shot was fired by a sniper which passed through the shoulder strap of another soldier’s flak-jacket before hitting the other soldier in the head.

3rd September 1971: A UDR soldier was shot dead when an IRA unit attacked Kinawley British Army base in County Fermanagh.

9th September 1971: A British Army bomb-disposal expert was killed attempting to defuse an IRA bomb in Drumankelly, County Antrim.

Photo by Best DSC!13th September 1971: The Leeson Street Patrol, Northern Ireland, 1971. R Company, The Royal Green Jackets, where Cpl Thompson was awarded the DCM for outstanding Bravery.

14th September 1971: A British soldier was shot dead during an IRA attack on a British Army mobile patrol in Edendork, County Tyrone.

15th September 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the grounds of Victoria Hospital in Belfast.

17th September 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

18th September 1971: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA gun attack on his foot patrol in Strabane, County Tyrone.

23rd September 1971: A patrol boat belonging to the Northern Ireland Fishery Conservancy Board was bombed and wrecked by an IRA unit at Derrynver, Lough Neagh.

1st October 1971: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun-attack on a British Army foot patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

2nd October 1971: An IRA volunteer died after the bomb he was transporting exploded accidentally outside Lisburn.

11th October 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while on foot-patrol on the Letterkenny Road in Derry.

15th October 1971: Two RUC officers were shot dead when an IRA unit attacked their patrol car on the Woodvale Road in Belfast.

16th October 1971: 12088592_10207091460460264_4989747756274816684_nRfn. Joseph Hill. Was shot dead by the IRA during riots in the Bogside area of Derry.

17th October 1971: Two British soldiers were killed when their armoured mobile patrol was caught in an IRA sniper ambush in Belfast.

23rd October 1971: Two unarmed female IRA volunteers were shot dead by the British Army in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

24th October 1971: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by undercover RUC officers during a bomb attack in Donegall Place, Belfast.

27th October 1971: Two British soldiers were killed when the IRA bombed Rosemount British Army base in Derry.

27th October 1971: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol near Toome, County Antrim.

27th October 1971: A British soldier was killed when a British Army armoured personnel carrier struck an IRA landmine in Kinawley, County Fermanagh.

29th October 1971: An RUC officer was killed when the IRA bombed the RUC base on Antrim Road in Belfast.

30th October 1971: A British soldier was killed when the IRA bombed a British Army Observation Post on the corner of Cupar Street in Belfast.

31st October 1971: A British soldier was killed in an IRA sniper attack on his patrol in Stockmans Lane, Belfast.

1st November 1971: Two RUC officers were shot dead by an IRA unit while investigating a robbery at Avoca Shopping Centre in Belfast.

2nd November 1971: Three civilians were killed when the IRA bombed the Ormeau Road RUC base. The three were drinking in the Red Lion bar which is next door to the base.

4th November 1971: A British soldier was killed in an IRA sniper attack on Henry Taggart British Army base in Ballymurphy, Belfast.

7 th November 1971: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA drive-by attack in Lurgan, County Armagh.

9th November 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper on Foyle Road in Derry City.

11th November 1971: Two RUC officers were shot dead by the IRA in Belfast. They had left the base to go into a shop on the street behind it when they were ambushed by an IRA unit.

18th November 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while guarding a bus depot in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

24th November 1971: A civilian was killed in the crossfire during an IRA attack on a British Army base in Strabane.

24th November 1971: A British Army bomb disposal expert was killed attempting to defuse a car-bomb in Lurgan, County Armagh.

27th November 1971: Two Customs Officials were killed when IRA snipers attacked Killeen Customs Post near Newry. The soldiers guarding the post were the intended targets.

27th November 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol in the Falls Road area of Belfast.

29th November 1971: An off-duty British soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

6th December 1971: A civilian was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Belfast. The bomb destroyed a business premises. The damage resulted in one of the walls collapsing in on top of the building next door, crushing a civilian.

7th December 1971: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Curlagh, County Tyrone.

8th December 1971: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA gun attacks in Belfast.

10th December 1971: A UDR soldier and an ex-soldier were killed when their car was attacked by an IRA unit near Clady, Strabane.

11th December 1971: A bomb attack on a furniture shop on the Shankill Road in Belfast killed four Protestant civilians, including two children. No organisation claimed responsibility, but there was speculation that it may have been planted by the IRA in retaliation for the McGurk’s Bar bombing of 4th December.

16th December 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

18th December 1971: Three IRA volunteers died in Magherafelt, County Londonderry, when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely.

21st December 1971: A Catholic publican was killed when he picked up and attempted to remove a bomb that had been planted in his pub on Lisburn Road, Belfast. Although Catholic-owned pubs were usually targeted by loyalists, the Sutton database lists the IRA as responsible.

21st December 1971: An unarmed IRA volunteer was summarily executed after being captured by the British Army in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

29th December 1971: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun attack on a foot patrol in the Brandywell area of Derry City.

31st December 1971: An IRA volunteer was killed when a bomb he was assembling exploded accidentally in Santry, Dublin.

1972
5th January 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

7th January 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed in a gun-battle with British troops in the Falls area of Belfast.

12th January 1972: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

13th January 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while driving a van through Newtownabbey, County Antrim.

17th January: Seven IRA volunteers, jailed in the prison ship HMS Maidstone, made good their escape through a porthole on the side away from the dock. They swam to the dockside and hijacked a bus which they drove to the Markets area. The escapees later held a press conference.

18th January 1972: A Catholic civilian was shot dead, apparently by the IRA, after he came forward as a witness to the IRA hijacking of a bus in The Mount area of Belfast.

21st January 1972: A British soldier was killed when he stepped on an IRA landmine near Keady, County Armagh.

26th January 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed when a bomb he was planting at an RUC base in Castlewellan, County Down, exploded accidentally.

27th January 1972: An IRA unit which included Martin Meehan fought a 4-hour gun battle with a British Army detachment at Dungooley in south County Armagh. The British Army alone fired over 4,500 rounds while the IRA returned fire with assault rifles and an anti-tank gun. There were no casualties in the battle with the exception of a pig which was caught in the crossfire. 8 IRA volunteers were arrested south of the border but were eventually acquitted.

27 thJanuary 1972: Two RUC officers were killed when their patrol vehicle was hit by IRA gunfire in the Creggan area of Derry.

28th January 1972: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA gun attack at a garage in the Oldpark area of Belfast.

30th January 1972: Major Robin Alers-Hankey. Died four months after being injured in an IRA sniper attack in the Bogside area of Derry.

1st February 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

2nd February 1972: A bomb exploded at the Catholic-owned Imperial Bar in Stewartstown, County Tyrone. The pub was officially closed in mourning for those who died on Bloody Sunday, but some customers had gone in through the back door for a drink. One Catholic civilian was killed. There was initial newspaper speculation that the IRA had bombed the bar because it had not closed fully, and the Sutton database lists the IRA as responsible. However, it is generally believed that loyalists were responsible for the attack, which fits the pattern of loyalist attacks in the county.

5th February 1972: Two IRA volunteers were killed when a bomb they were transporting exploded accidentally on a barge in Lough Neagh.

10th February 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed in a gun battle with the RUC in Newtownabbey, County Antrim.

10th February 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their Armoured Personnel Carrier in Cullyhanna, County Armagh.

13th February 1972: An off-duty British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh.

16th February 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA gun attacks in Derry and at the Moira roundabout in County Down.

21st February 1972: Four IRA volunteers died in Belfast when a bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely.

29th February 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Lurgan, County Armagh.

1st March 1972: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Garrisson, County Fermanagh.

2nd March 1972: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA ambush in Newry.

3rd March 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper team on Manor Street in Belfast.

4th March 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the RUC during a bomb attack on a factory in Boucher Street, Belfast.

4th March 1972: A bomb exploded at the Abercorn Restaurant in Belfast without any warning. Two civilians were killed and over 100 people injured. The IRA were blamed, but denied responsibility.

8th March 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead at his workplace by the IRA in Middletown, County Armagh.

9th March 1972: Three IRA volunteers were killed when a bomb they were assembling exploded accidentally in a house in Clonard, Belfast.

14th March 1972: Two IRA volunteers were shot dead by the British Army in Dove Gardens, Derry City.

14th March 1972: A two-man IRA unit armed with sub-machine guns ambushed a joint British Army/RUC patrol on Brackaville Road outside Coalisland. Over 50 shots were fired by the unit. The RUC officer who was driving the police patrol vehicle was killed.

14th March 1972: After the end of a three-day cease fire, an IRA bomb caused widespread damage in the main street of Lisburn. Three soldiers and an RUC officer were wounded.

15th March 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Belfast. An RUC officer was killed in an IRA gun attack in Coalisland, County Tyrone.

20th March 1972: Two RUC officers, a British soldier and four civilians were killed when the IRA detonated a carbomb on Donegall Street in Belfast. The warning had been inadequate.

20th March 1972: Rfn. John Taylor. Was shot dead by an IRA sniper on William Street in Londonderry.

23rd March 1972: The IRA detonated two car bombs in Main Street, Bangor.

25 thMarch 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed when two IRA units engaged each other in error on the Springfield Road in Belfast.

28th March 1972: The IRA carried out a car-bomb attack on Limavady RUC base in County Londonderry. Two civilians who were driving past at the time were killed in the explosion.

29th March 1972: A British soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack on Wellington Street in Belfast.

30th March 1972: A civilian was killed in the crossfire of a gun-battle between the IRA and the British Army in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

7th April 1972: Three IRA volunteers died when a bomb they were assembling exploded accidentally in a garage in the Greencastle area of Belfast.

8th April 1972: A British soldier was killed in an IRA sniper attack on his patrol on the Springfield Road in Belfast.

13th April 1972: The IRA detonated a car-bomb on the Main Street of Ballymoney, County Antrim. Despite a warning to evacuate the area, one civilian was killed.

17th April 1972: A British Army officer and three soldiers were shot and wounded by an IRA unit at Divis Flats, Belfast. A nine-year-old boy was also injured.

19th April 1972: A UDR soldier was killed after being kidnapped by the IRA near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

25th April 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun-attack on a British Army Permanent Vehicle Checkpoint on the Donegall Road in Belfast.

29th April 1972: A civilian was killed in the crossfire between an IRA unit and the British Army outside Oldpark British Army base in Belfast.

10th May 1972: An IRA bomb set a fire that destroyed the Belfast Co-operative store.

11th May 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

13th May 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed in a gun-battle with the British Army on William Street in Derry.

13th May 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in a gun-battle with the IRA in Ballymurphy, Belfast.

17th May 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack while repairing a damaged perimeter fence at Crossmaglen British Army base in County Armagh.

18th May 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper on Flax Street in Belfast.

20th May 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

23rd May 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

26th May 1972: The IRA detonated a car-bomb on Oxford Street in Belfast. A civilian was killed in the explosion.

28th May 1972: Four IRA volunteers, along with four civilians, were killed when a bomb they were preparing exploded accidentally in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

30th May 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA sniper and bomb attacks in Belfast.

2nd June 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their foot-patrol in Rosslea, County Fermanagh.

6th June 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA sniper attacks in Belfast.

8th June 1972: A member of the Garda Síochána was killed when he set off an IRA booby-trap bomb. He had strayed a few yards across the border into Legkelly, County Fermanagh.

8th June 1972: A UDR soldier was killed by an IRA sniper on the Buncrana Road in Derry.

9th June 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA unit after leaving his workplace in Finaghy, Belfast.

11th June 1972: Colonel Gaddafi announced that he had supplied arms to “revolutionaries” in Ireland. There were shooting incidents across Belfast and Northern Ireland, including a gun battle between Loyalist and Republican paramilitaries in the Oldpark area of Belfast. Three civilians and a British soldier were killed.

12th June 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA during a gun-battle in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

18th June 1972: Three British soldiers were killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack. The bomb had been left in a derelict house in Bleary, County Armagh.

19th June 1972: An associate of the OIRA was shot dead by the IRA during a dispute in the Cracked Cup Social Club in Belfast.

19th June 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Ardoyne, Belfast.

21st June 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on guard duty at a British base in Derry.

24th June 1972: Three British soldiers were killed by an IRA land mine attack near Dungiven, County Londonderry.

26th June 1972: Rfn James Meredith was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on mobile-patrol in Abercon Road Londonderry.

26th June–8 July 1972: IRA ceasefire and talks with British government.

27th June 1972: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA after attempting to drive though one of their vehicle checkpoints.

7th July 1972: A civilian was shot dead after crashing his car into an IRA roadblock.

9th July 1972: A UDA member was shot dead by the IRA in the Markets area of Belfast.

11th July 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun attack in Derry.

13th July 1972: Four British soldiers and an IRA volunteer were killed in various gun-battles across Belfast. The British Army also killed two# armed men.

14th July 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead in a gun battle with the British Army. Also killed in the violence were three British soldiers, an OIRA volunteer and a civilian.

15th July 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA attacks in Belfast and Armagh.

16th July 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their armoured vehicle in Crossmaglen, County Armagh. In Belfast an RUC officer was killed in an IRA gun attack on his patrol car. A member of the IRA Youth Section was killed by a rubber bullet fired by security forces in Strabane, County Tyrone.

18th July 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper at the British Army base in Ballymurphy, Belfast. The IRA also shot dead a civilian who attempted to stop a bomb attack on a building in Belfast.

20th July 1972: A civilian was shot dead attempting to stop an IRA bomb attack on his business premises.

21th July 1972: On “Bloody Friday” 22 bombs in Belfast killed two British soldiers, a UDA member and six civilians and injured 130 others. The IRA officially apologised for this set of attacks in 2002. An IRA volunteer was killed in a gun battle with British troops in the Markets area of Belfast.

23rd July 1972: A UDR soldier was kidnapped and shot dead by the IRA in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

24th July 1972: A Chinese restaurant was destroyed by an IRA bomb in the Dockside area of Derry. As British troops arrived on the scene they were ambushed by a sniper. One civilian was wounded in the crossfire.

24th July 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Ballymurphy, Belfast.

26th July 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA attack on a British foot-patrol in the Unity Flats, Belfast.

28th July 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by a British sniper while sitting in a car outside the “Starry Plough Bar” in Belfast.

31st July 1972: Three car bombs exploded in the Claudy bombings, killing nine people on Claudy High Street near Derry. The IRA have always denied involvement, but they are believed to have been responsible. In Operation Motorman, the biggest British military operation since the Suez crisis, the army used 12,000 soldiers supported by tanks and bulldozers to dismantle barricades and take IRA held “no go areas” in Belfast and Derry.

3rd August 1972: An IRA volunteer and a British soldier were killed in separate attacks in Belfast and Tyrone.

4th August 1972: L/Cpl. David Card. Was killed by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

7th August 1972: Four British soldiers were killed in three separate IRA attacks across Northern Ireland.

9th August 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed when a bomb exploded accidentally in a garage in Newry.

11th August 1972: Two IRA volunteers died when the vanbomb they were transporting exploded prematurely in the Lower Falls, Belfast.

14th August 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack at Casement Park British Army base in Belfast. A civilian was also killed in the crossfire between an IRA unit and a British patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

17th August 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in a sniper attack just off the Grosvenor Road in Belfast.

18th August 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA sniper attacks in Belfast.

22th August 1972: The IRA shot dead a member of the Loyalist Association of Workers on Turin Street in Belfast.

22th August 1972: A bomb prematurely exploded at a customs post in Newry, killing nine people, including three IRA volunteers.

23rd August 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

24th August 1972: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British mobile-patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

25th August 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in the Shantallow area of Derry.

26th August 1972: Two UDR soldiers were killed in an IRA remote controlled bomb attack in Cherrymount, County Fermanagh.

26th August 1972: Two IRA volunteers died in a premature bomb explosion in Downpatrick, County Down.

27th August 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Creggan Heights, Derry.

28th August 1972: Cpl. Ian Morrill. Was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack on Beechmount Avenue in Belfast. A civilian was also killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb near his farm in County Fermanagh. It was reported that the bomb had been intended for soldiers who were patrolling the area following reports of gunfire.

30th August 1972: Rfn. David Griffiths ( Shot by sniper ) one of Two British soldiers who were killed in separate IRA gun and bomb attacks in Belfast. In the early morning of 30th of August 1972 a foot patrol of ‘B’ Company, 3rd Royal Green jackets, commanded by 2nd Lieutenant A. Kinnear, moved slowly down the street, the soldiers keenly but nervously alert. The practice of the patrol was to move forward in a leap-frogging manner with the first section of the patrol taking up a stationary position to cover the second section of the patrol as it moved quickly forward. The second section then took up a similar position to cover the advance of the first section.

Rifleman Griffiths moved quickly forward from his covering position to take up a kneeling position in front of the window of the house on the comer of Clonards Street, which unbeknown to him, was occupied by the I.R.A. gunmen. The previously loosened brick was silently removed and, edging his rifle quietly through the gap, the terrorist gunman shot Rifleman Griffiths in the back at point-blank range.

Although wearing body armour in the form of a flak-jacket the range was too close for the jacket to protect him adequately – he was mortally wounded and died a few minutes later. In the confusion, the murderers made good their escape via the back door of the house, through the narrow back streets of The Falls, until they merged into the safety of the residents of the area, sympathetic to their cause. Only 24 hours previously, Corporal Morrill of ‘A’ Company, 3rd Green Jackets, had been killed in the same area whilst searching a terrorist suspect.

Griffiths was buried with full military honours at Allerton Cemetery, his coffin being borne on a gun-carriage and the service attended by Lieutenant-Colonel Robin Evelegh, 3rd Royal Green Jackets, and Griffiths’ platoon commander, 2nd Lieutenant Andrew Kinnear; sold with a poignant hand written letter from a fellow Green Jacket who was charged with the removal of Griffiths’ body to the mortuary – on collecting his private possessions for return to his family, the tip of the round that killed him was found inside of his flak jacket.

10th September 1972: Three British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British Armoured Personnel Carrier near Dungannon, County Tyrone.

10th September 1972: L/Cpl Ian George  Died of unknown causes in his sleep whilst on tour.

15th September 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack in the Bogside area of Derry.

17th September 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army during a riot in the Creggan area of Derry.

18th September 1972: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun attack while on foot-patrol in the Lecky Road area of Derry.

20th September 1972: A British soldier was killed in a gun battle with the IRA on Springhill Avenue in Ballymurphy, Belfast.

21st September 1972: A UDR soldier and his wife were killed in an IRA gun attack on their home in Derrylin, County Fermanagh.

22nd September 1972: A British soldier was killed in an IRA sniper attack in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

27th September 1972: A British soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack in Derry. A civilian, who was a member of the Orange Order, was killed in an IRA gun attack at the corner of Ligoniel Road and Mill Avenue, Belfast.

29th September 1972: An IRA volunteer and a British soldier were killed in a gun-battle in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

30th September 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

2nd October 1972: An undercover British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Twinbrook area of Belfast.

2nd October 1972: The IRA kidnapped and killed four alleged informers.

6th October 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed during an IRA attack on a British Army base in the Lower Falls, Belfast.

10th October 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Newry.

10th October 1972: Three IRA volunteers died when a bomb they were assembling exploded in a house in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

13th October 1972: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while driving a car along Castle Street in Belfast.

18th October 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on a British mobile-patrol in the Falls Road area of Belfast.

22nd October 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA on his farm in Derrydoon, County Fermanagh.

22nd October 1972: Two barges were bombed and sunk by the IRA at Lough Neagh with a loss of £80,000.

24th October 1972: Two British soldiers were killed in separate IRA sniper and bomb attacks in Belfast and Armagh.

28th October 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol on Bishop Street in Derry.

31st October 1971: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

8th November 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while driving his car through Lurgan, County Armagh.

10th November 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while manning a vehicle checkpoint in the Oldpark area of Belfast.

13th November 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while driving his car along La Salle Drive in Belfast.

14th November 1972: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA as he stood guarding homes which were being raided by the British Army in the Unity Flats complex in Belfast.

16th November 1972: An RUC officer was killed by an under-car booby trap bomb which detonated as he drove through Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.

20th November 1972: Two British soldiers were killed by a booby-trap bomb hidden in an abandoned house in Cullyhanna, County Armagh.

22nd November 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his home near Maghera, County Londonderry.

28th November 1972: The IRA fired 15 rockets at ten security posts throughout Northern Ireland. An RUC officer was killed in a rocket attack on Belleek RUC base, County Fermanagh. This is the first recorded use of an RPG-7 by the IRA. Two IRA volunteers were killed in a premature bomb explosion in the Bogside area of Derry. A British Army bomb disposal expert was killed attempting to defuse an IRA bomb in the Strand Road area of Derry.

29th November 1972: Another three rockets hit British Army posts in Northern Ireland.

5th December 1972: The IRA fired 15 rockets and mortars at security posts throughout Northern Ireland. An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside a post office in Killeter, County Tyrone.

6th December 1972: Eleven British soldiers were hurt when their APC was hit by a rocket in the Lower Falls district of Belfast. One of them lost an arm. Another three soldiers were hurt in a gun attack on their APC in the Ballymurphy district of Belfast.

7th December 1972: Mother of ten, Jean McConville, was kidnapped and killed by the IRA, allegedly for informing the British Army of IRA activities, although her family contend that she was killed for comforting a wounded British soldier. The IRA denied any involvement in the killing until the 1990s, when it acknowledged its action and helped to locate the body.

8th December 1972: Rfn. Raymond Joesbury. Was shot dead by the IRA while on mobile patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

10th December 1972: A British soldier was killed by a booby-trapped rocket launcher which had been planted by the IRA at Fort Monagh British Army base in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast.

13th December 1972: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside the Chester Park Hotel in Belfast.

16th December 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by loyalists at his butchers shop in Derrylin, County Fermanagh.

18th December 1972: Ulster Unionist Party Councillor William Johnston was kidnapped and shot dead by the IRA in Armagh town. He was also a member of the Police Authority.

20th December 1972: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Claudy, County Londonderry.

24th December 1972: A British soldier was killed after being shot by an IRA sniper on Lecky Road in Derry.

27th December 1972: An IRA volunteer was killed by the British Army while carrying out a gun attack on their patrol in Strabane, County Tyrone.

29th December 1972: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while out walking in Ballyarnet, County Londonderry.

1st January 1973: A rocket hit Springfield Road RUC base in Belfast, injuring two people. The following night, another rocket was fired at Beragh RUC base, County Tyrone. It missed the target and hit an unoccupied house nearby.

4th January 1973: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Straidarran, County Londonderry.

5th January 1973: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA outside a filling station in Belfast. He had been mistaken for an off-duty British soldier.

14th January 1973: Three members of the RUC were killed in separate IRA bomb attacks in Cappagh and Derry City.

16th January 1973: An off-duty UDR soldier was kidnapped and shot dead by the IRA in Belfast. his body was dumped in an abandoned car.

18th January 1973: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army during an attempted robbery in the grounds of the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast.

25th January 1973: A judge was shot dead by the IRA on the Falls Road in Belfast.

26th January 1973: A UDR landrover was hit by an IRA grenade and gunfire near Whitecross, County Armagh. Three soldiers were hurt. Another soldier was badly wounded by a sniper while patrolling in Lurgan, County Armagh.

30th January 1973: A UDA member was kidnapped and shot dead by the IRA near Rodney Parade in Belfast. It was alleged that the UDA member had been involved in the killing of a 15 year old Catholic boy the day before.

1973

1st February 1973: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack while he was manning a vehicle checkpoint in Strabane, County Tyrone.

2nd February 1973: A UDA member was killed in an IRA drive-by gun attack on the Oldpark Road in Belfast.

4th February 1973: An IRA volunteer, along with three civilians, were shot dead by British Army snipers in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

6th February 1973: A British soldier was killed in an IRA rocket attack on a British Army Armoured Personnel carrier in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

7th February 1973: A UDA member was kidnapped by the IRA and later found shot dead in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

8th February 1973: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA sniper as he sat in a stationary patrol car in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

10th February 1973: Two IRA volunteers were killed when a bomb they were assembling exploded prematurely near Strangford, County Down.

14th February 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while patrolling the Divis Flats complex in west Belfast.

20th February 1973: Two British soldiers were killed when their mobile-patrol was ambushed by IRA snipers in Cupar Street, Belfast.

21st February 1973: A British soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack on Fort Pegasus British Army base in the Whiterock area of Belfast.

25th February 1973: A nine-year-old child was killed after he triggered an IRA booby trap bomb which had been planted at the rear of his house.

27th February 1973: Two RUC officers were killed when their patrol was ambushed by an IRA sniper in Aghagallon, County Antrim.

28th February 1973: A British soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack on a patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

3rd March 1973: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Mullennan, County Londonderry.

4th March 1973: A British soldier was killed when the IRA carried out a gun attack on a British Army unit which was raiding homes in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

6th March 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while patrolling the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. Another British soldier was wounded by an IRA booby-trap bomb planted in a derelict house near Forkill, County Armagh. He died on 8th March 1973.

8th March 1973: The Provisional IRA conducted its first operation in England, planting four car bombs in London. Two bombs exploded, killing one person and injuring 265 others. Ten members of the IRA team, including Gerry Kelly, Dolours Price and Marian Price, were arrested at Heathrow Airport trying to leave the country.

8th March 1973: During the Border-Poll a number of polling stations came under IRA attack with a British soldier being shot dead by the IRA at a station in the Lower Falls.

13th March 1973: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby trap bomb while on patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

16th March 1973: A UDR soldier was kidnapped by the IRA and shot dead on the New Lodge Road in Belfast.

17th March 1973: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on his armoured patrol near Dungannon, County Tyrone.

23rd March 1973: Three British soldiers were killed by the IRA after being lured to a house on Antrim Road in Belfast. All three were shot dead.

26th March 1973: The IRA fired four rockets at British and RUC targets. One was fired at a British Saracen APC near the border, one at an RUC landrover near the border and another at a British patrol in Belfast.

27th March 1973: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British mobile patrol in Ballygawley, County Tyrone.

29th March 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol in Andersonstown, Belfast.

1st April 1973: A rocket was fired at Caledon RUC base, County Tyrone. It exploded against the perimeter fence and caused little damage.

7th April 1973: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British armoured patrol near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

9th April 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol in Lurgan, County Armagh.

11th April 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while on foot-patrol in the Bogside area of Derry City.

12th April 1973: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army in the Lower Falls area of Belfast.

17th April 1973: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by a British Army sniper while standing talking with a number of men in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

20th April 1973: A British soldier was shot by an IRA sniper in the New Lodge, Belfast. A British post was hit by a rocket and then raked with gunfire in Ballymurphy, Belfast. The British returned fire but there were no casualties.

28th April 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Shantallow, Derry City.

29th April 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on mobile-patrol in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

3rd May 1973: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol on the Foyle Road in Derry City.

5th May 1973: Three British soldiers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their foot patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

10th May 1973: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone. In Fermanagh, an IRA volunteer Anthony Ahern was killed when a landmine he was preparing near Rosslea exploded.

13th May 1973: Two British soldiers were killed when the IRA detonated a remote-controlled bomb as their foot patrol passed on the Donegall Road in Belfast. In Tyrone, an IRA volunteer was killed as he attempted to smash his car through a British Army UDR checkpoint near Coagh.

14th May 1973: A civilian was killed when he triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb hidden in a derelict cottage on Moy Road in Portadown, County Armagh. The bomb was intended for the security forces.

17th May 1973: A booby trap bomb in Omagh, County Tyrone killed four off-duty British soldiers. A fifth soldier died of his injuries on 3rd June.

18th May 1973: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while carrying out a sniper attack on a British patrol.

24th May 1973: Two British soldiers were killed in an IRA remote-controlled bomb attack as they searched houses in Cullaville, County Armagh.

26th May 1973: A civilian was killed during an IRA sniper attack on a British Army foot patrol on Finaghy Road North, Belfast.

5th June 1973: The IRA shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Belmore Street in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh.

5th June 1973: A civilian was found shot dead near Clogher, County Tyrone. The IRA said he was killed for being an informer.

12th June 1973: Six civilians were killed by an IRA car bomb on Railway Road in Coleraine, County Londonderry. The warning given by the IRA had been inadequate.

21st June 1973: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in an empty building on Lecky Road, Derry.

21st June 1973: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in an empty building in Strabane.

25th June 1973: Three IRA volunteers were killed when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely in their car on Gortin Road near Omagh, County Tyrone.

26th June 1973: The IRA shot dead a civilian who worked for the British Army as he left Bligh’s Lane British Army Base, Derry.

1st July 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier at Bull Ring, Belfast.

4th July 1973: A British base in Derry was hit by two rockets and raked with gunfire. Another rocket exploded against the fence of a British base in Belfast, hurting two people. Two British patrols were ambushed elsewhere in Belfast and two people were hurt in the crossfire.

10th July 1973: The IRA shot dead a former UDR soldier outside Tully’s Bar in Belleek, County Armagh.

11th July 1973: A rocket was fired at a British post guarding a gasworks in Derry. It hit an anti-rocket screen and there were no casualties. The IRA claimed responsibility.

17th July 1973: Two British soldiers were killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in an electricity junction box at Divis Flats, Belfast.

18th July 1973: A patrolling British soldier was wounded by an IRA landmine near Clogher, County Tyrone. He died on 22nd July 1973.

20th July 1973: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in Middletown, County Armagh.

20th July 1973: The IRA shot dead an off-duty UDR soldier outside his home in Ballintemple, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

21st July 1973: Two IRA volunteers were killed when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely in their car in Newcastle, County Down.

3rd August 1973: IRA members shot dead a civilian who was delivering wages to the British Leyland factory on Cashel Road, Dublin. They were carrying-out an armed robbery.

11th August 1973: An IRA volunteer died when the bomb he was transporting exploded prematurely in a car at Kilclean, County Donegal.

11th August 1973: An IRA assault team consisting of over 20 volunteers surrounded Crossmaglen RUC barracks. The barracks was hit with rockets, mortars and machine gun fire. The RUC fired a large number of shots at the unit. There were no serious injuries on either side.

13th August 1973: The IRA shot dead an off-duty RUC Reservist at his workplace on Cathedral Road, Armagh town.

16th August 1973: Two IRA volunteers were killed when a mortar prematurely exploded during an attack on Pomeroy British Army/RUC base, County Tyrone. The IRA attacked the base for about an hour with machine-guns, a dozen mortars and three rockets.

18th August 1973: Two IRA firebombs exploded at Harrods Department store in London causing slight damage.

20th August 1973: Book bombs were sent to a number of places in London including the Old Bailey and the Union Jack Club. Ten incendiary devices were also defused in Londons West End.

22nd August 1973: An IRA book bomb exploded at the Conservative Party Central Office in London.

23rd August 1973: The IRA accidentally shot dead a civilian as she drove her car at Tullyvallan, County Armagh. The sniper had mistaken her car for that of a UDR soldier.

23rd August 1973: A book bombs was sent to the Lieutenant General of the Ministry of Defence in London but was defused. An IRA bomb in a tube station in London was also defused.

24th August 1973: A civilian was found shot dead in a car on Buncrana Road, Derry. The IRA said it killed him for being an informer.

24th August 1973: One person was injured when an IRA letterbomb exploded at the London Stock Exchange.

25th August 1973: One person was injured when an IRA letterbomb exploded at the Bank of England in London. An IRA bomb was also defused in Oxford Street.

25th August 1973: The IRA shot an undercover British soldier outside Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast. He died on 18th September 1973.

27th August 1973: The IRA destroyed The Royal Bastion monument to British Governor Walker in Derry with a large bomb.

28th August 1973: The IRA shot dead a UDR soldier in the Culdee area of Armagh town.

29th August 1973: Two IRA bombs exploded in Solihull Shopping Centre in England. A building society was extensively damaged.

30th August 1973: A British Army officer was killed while trying to defuse an IRA bomb at Tullyhommon Post Office, County Fermanagh.

23rd August 1973: Two IRA volunteers were hurt in a premature explosion in a house on Elaine Street, Belfast. One died on 30th August and the other died on 1st September 1973.

30th August 1973: A shoe shop in London was destroyed by an IRA firebomb and a bomb was defused at Baker Street tube station.

10704032_10152819986427207_5142639276806756138_n31st August 1973: One IRA volunteer was killed and another wounded in a shootout with the British Army on Ballymurphy Road, Belfast. The other died on 22nd September 1973,James Bryson 25 years, Ballymurphy, west Belfast, an IRA activist, he was shot and fatally wounded by undercover British soldiers in Ballymurphy on 31st of in August 1973. He died in hospital on the 22nd of September 1973. Patrick Mulvenna (19), also an IRA activist was shot dead in the same incident. Both men were getting out of a car when they were shot. An RGJ  was awarded the Military Medal for this incident. ( for a full read up on this story please see The Bryson report ) https://www.memorialatpeninsula.org/?p=14239

31st August 1973: Three vehicles were damaged when an IRA bomb exploded on Old Quebec Street in London.

5th September 1973: A civilian was killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb by driving his tractor into a field near Belcoo, County Fermanagh. It is believed it was planted by the IRA and intended for the security forces. The RUC had just removed a dummy bomb at the scene.

7th September 1973: The IRA shot dead an off-duty UDR soldier near Belcoo, County Fermanagh.

8th September 1973: An IRA bomb exploded at the ticket office in Victoria Station, London, injuring five people.

10th Septepmber 1973: The IRA detonated bombs at two train stations in London. Injuring 13 people.

12th September 1973: Two Police officers were injured when an IRA bomb exploded at the offices of the Royal Naval Association in London. A woman collapsed and died during an evacuation following a hoax bomb alert at Euston Station in London.

17th September 1973: A British Army bomb disposal expert was wounded attempting to defuse an IRA bomb which had been planted in Birmingham, England. He died on 23rd September 1973. Another IRA bomb was discovered at a Household Cavalry camp in Surrey.

20th September 1973: Five people were injured when an IRA bomb exploded at the Headquarters of the Duke of York in London.

22nd September 1973: A civilian was found shot dead on Foyle Road, Derry. The IRA claimed it killed him for being an informer.

2nd October 1973: An IRA incendiary bomb caused extensive damage to a department store in Colchester, Essex. Another IRA firebomb damaged Heathrow airport.

3rd October 1973: A British soldier was killed by a booby-trap bomb in a parcel left at Bligh’s Lane British Army Base, Derry.

3rd October 1973: The IRA shot dead a former UDR soldier in Lurgan, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

4th October 1973: Four people were injured when an IRA bomb exploded at a British Army careers office in London.

16th October 1973: The IRA shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Antrim Road, Belfast.

28th October 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

28th October 1973: The IRA shot dead an off-duty RUC officer near Lifford, County Donegal.

31st October 1973: Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape. Three IRA volunteers escaped from Mountjoy Prison, Dublin after a hijacked helicopter landed in the exercise yard. One of the escapees was former IRA Chief of Staff Seamus Twomey.

6th November 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier in Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

13th November 1973: A civilian was found shot dead near the Floral Hall on Antrim Road, Belfast. The IRA said it killed him because he was an informer.

14th November 1973: A civilian was killed during an IRA sniper attack on a British Army observation post on Moira Street, Belfast.

14th November 1973: A civilian was killed during an IRA sniper attack on a British Army patrol on Lecky Road, Derry.

15th November 1973: The RUC shot dead an IRA volunteer during a gun attack on Keady British Army/RUC base, County Armagh.

24th November 1973: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA landmine near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

24th November 1973: The British Army shot dead a Fianna member during a bomb attack on a British Army patrol at Divis Flats, Belfast.

25th November 1973: The IRA shot dead two patrolling British soldiers at Rossville Flats, Derry. Six rockets and heavy gunfire hit Belleek RUC base, County Fermanagh. The attack came from the other side of the border.

( 26th November 1973: Rfn Nicolas Allen, Death by violent or unnatural causes. )

27th November 1973: The British Army shot dead an IRA volunteer as he tried to hijack a car in Coalisland, County Tyrone.

1st December 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Edward Street, Lurgan, County Armagh.

3rd December 1973: The British Army shot dead an IRA volunteer at Central Drive, Derry. The IRA unit was attempting to ambush a British patrol.

10th December 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier on Leeson Street, Belfast.

11th December 1973: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to his car at his home in Newcastle, County Down. Another under-car bomb blew-off an RUC officer’s leg in Downpatrick, County Down. Belcoo RUC base in County Fermanagh was attacked with rockets and machine-guns, wounding one officer.

15th December 1973: The IRA shot dead a former RUC officer at Derrynoose near Keady, County Armagh.

15th December 1973: An IRA volunteer died when the bomb he was carrying exploded pematurely as he walked across Clady bridge Strabane.

17th December 1973: One person was injured when an IRA letterbomb exploded at Collier House in London.

18th December 1973: The IRA carried out a series of attacks in London. IN one attack two police officers were injured in an explosion in Ronan Way. 52 People were injured when a bomb exploded at Horseferry House and six people were injured when a bomb exploded at a Postal sorting office.

19th December 1973: One person was injured when an IRA letterbomb exploded at a postal sorting office in London.

20th December 1973: The IRA accidentally shot dead a civilian on Atlantic Avenue, Belfast. An RUC Reservist was the intended target.

23rd December 1973: The IRA carried out a series of bombings in London. Bombs exploded at Kensington police station, Hammersmith offices, George Wimpey and outside the White Lion pub.

24th December 1973: The Provisional IRA left two packages which exploded almost simultaneously in the late evening on Christmas Eve. One was in the doorway of the North Star public house South Hampstead, which exploded injuring six people, and the other exploded on the upstairs verandah of the nearby Swiss Cottage Tavern where an unspecified number of people were injured.

24th December 1973: Three IRA volunteers were killed when their bomb prematurely exploded in Clarke’s Bar on Monaghan Street, Newry.

26th December 1973: One person was injured when an IRA bomb exploded at Stage Door public house in London.

31st December 1973: An IRA sniper shot dead a British soldier who was traveling in an APC on Beechmount Avenue, Belfast.

1st January 1974: A civilian was shot dead during an IRA sniper attack attack on a British Army patrol on McClure Street, Belfast.

17th January 1974: The IRA shot dead an off-duty UDR soldier near his home at Trillick, County Fermanagh.

20th January 1974: A UDR soldier was found shot dead in a field near Aughnacloy, County Tyrone. He had been shot by the IRA.

21st January 1974: A British soldier was killed by an IRA remote-controlled bomb hidden in an electricity distribution box on Lone Moor Road, Derry. It was detonated when a British foot-patrol passed.

23rd January 1974: An IRA unit which included Rose Dugdale and Eddie Gallagher hijacked a helicopter and used it to drop bombs on Strabane RUC station. One of the bombs landed on the grounds of the station, but failed to explode.

25th January 1974: A British soldier was killed by an IRA landmine as he and his patrol searched a field near Ballyronan, County Londonderry.

26th January 1974: The IRA shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Antrim Road in Newtownabbey, County Antrim.

29th January 1974: An IRA sniper fired at a bus carrying Royal Air Force (RAF) personnel at Shimna Parade in Newcastle, County Down. The RAF personnel returned fire, killing a civilian.

29th January 1974: The IRA shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Dungiven Road in Derry.

4th February 1974: Twelve people were killed in the M62 Coach Bombing, when a bomb exploded on a coach as it was travelling along the M62 motorway at Birkenshaw. The dead included nine soldiers, and two young children.

18th February 1974: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb while on foot-patrol at Moybane, County Armagh.

23rd February 1974: A large gun battle between the IRA and the British army occurred near Strabane, County Tyrone. The engagement also involved mortar rounds fired by the IRA. Some 25 Traveller caravans were trapped between the warring factions, and one of the vehicles was destroyed by a mortar bomb.

24th February 1974: A civilian was found shot dead at Rathlin Drive in Derry. He was killed by the IRA as it believed he was an informer.

2nd March 1974: The IRA shot dead a patrolling RUC officer on Donegall Street, Belfast.

3rd March 1974: An IRA landmine exploded and killed an UDR soldier at Donaghmore, County Tyrone.

10th March 1974: Two civilians were killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb hidden in a car at Dromintee, County Armagh. It was meant for a British foot-patrol.

12th March 1974: A Fine Gael senator, Billy Fox, was kidnapped by the IRA and later found shot dead near Clones, County Monaghan.

13th March 1974: The IRA shot dead a British soldier at a checkpoint on Chapel Lane, Belfast.

15th March 1974: Two IRA volunteers were killed when their landmine prematurely exploded on Aughnacloy Road in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

15th March 1974: A civilian was killed by an IRA lorry bomb on Queen Street in Magherafelt, County Londonderry. The warning sent by the IRA had been inadequate.

16th March 1974: IRA snipers shot dead two patrolling British soldiers at Moybane, County Armagh.

17th March 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling RUC officer in Craigavon, County Armagh.

17th March 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier on Foyle Road, Derry.

19th March 1974: An off-duty RUC officer was killed by an under-car booby-trap bomb at his home on Glenkeen Avenue in Greenisland, County Antrim.

21st March 1974: An IRA sniper shot a patrolling British soldier on Antrim Road, Belfast. He died on 28th March.

23rd March 1974: The IRA shot dead a former British soldier as he sat in his car in Mountfield, County Tyrone. He had recently retired.

26th March 1974: A civilian was killed by an IRA car bomb on Springfield Road, Belfast. He had been driving past at the time.

1st April 1974: It was reported that “small arms fire, mortar bombs and possibly rockets were used” in an attack on a British base in Derry. Two British soldiers were hurt.

9th April 1974: The IRA shot dead a British commanding officer at his home near Otterburn Training Area in Northumberland, England.

10th April 1974: The IRA shot dead a former UDR soldier at his workplace in Derrylin, County Fermanagh.

11th April 1974: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA landmine near Lisnaskea, County Fermanagh.

11th April 1974: A patrolling UDR soldier was killed by a remote controlled bomb in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

14th April 1974: The IRA shot dead an undercover British soldier who was watching a republican commemoration parade at Meenan Square, Derry.

16th April 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead an RUC officer outside Newtownhamilton RUC base, County Armagh.

18th April 1974: A civilian was killed when he triggered a booby-trap bomb near Loup, County Londonderry. It exploded about 8 ft from his tractor as he drove past Saltersland church hall. There had been a small explosion there earlier in the day. It is believed both bombs were planted by the IRA and that the second bomb was for security forces investigating the first.

20th April 1974: A civilian was found shot dead by the side of Upper Springfield Road, Belfast. The IRA shot him because it believed he was an informer.

22nd April 1974: A civilian who worked for the British Army was found shot dead in his car at Silverbridge, County Armagh.

1st May 1974: A British outpost came under IRA attack at Crossmaglen, County Armagh. It was hit by three rockets and a 15-minute gun-battle followed. No injuries were reported.

2nd May 1974: Up to 40 members from the Provisional IRA East Tyrone Brigade attacked a British army/UDR base at the Deanery in Clogher, County Tyrone with machine gun and RPG fire resulting the death of one female UDR soldier.

10th May 1974: The IRA shot dead two patrolling RUC officers on Finaghy Road North, Belfast.

13th May 1974: Two IRA volunteers were killed when their bomb prematurely exploded at a petrol station at Donnydeade, County Tyrone.

31st May 1974: A former Royal Navy serviceman was killed by a booby-trap bomb left in a bin at his home on Strabane Old Road, Derry. He worked for the Department of Environment at Ebrington Barracks in Derry. It is believed to have been planted by the IRA.

5th June 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier on Irish Street in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

17th June 1974: A bomb exploded at the Houses of Parliament in London, causing extensive damage and injuring 11 people.

18th June 1974: A patrolling RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in an entry off Market Street, Lurgan, County Armagh.

22nd June 1974: An RUC officer was shot dead from a passing car driven by IRA volunteers in Belfast.

22nd June 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier on New Lodge Road, Belfast.

24th June 1974: Two IRA volunteers died when the bomb they were planting in Derry exploded prematurely.

29th June 1974: An IRA sniper shot a patrolling British soldier on Whiterock Road, Belfast. He died on 4th July.

2nd July 1974: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in a derelict house near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

12th July 1974: The IRA shot dead a UDA member at Tiger’s Bay, Belfast.

17th July 1974: The IRA bombed the Tower of London. One civilian was killed.

20th July 1974: A former British soldier was found shot dead in a derelict house on Arundel Street, Belfast.

23rd July 1974: A UDR soldier is killed by an IRA car bomb on Bridge Street, Garvagh, County Londonderry.

30 thJuly 1974: The IRA devastated the commercial centre of Bangor town, County Down, in an overnight fire bomb attack.

30th July 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead a patrolling British soldier on Hillman Street, Belfast.

13th August 1974: Two Royal Marines were killed when the IRA detonated a remote-controlled bomb in their observation post at Drummuckavall, County Armagh.

23rd August 1974: The IRA shot dead an undercover RUC officer in Diamond Bar on George Street, Omagh, County Tyrone.

23rd August 1974: The IRA shot dead a former UDR soldier at Cabragh, County Tyrone.

26th August 1974: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA sniper in Craigavon, County Armagh.

27th August 1974: An IRA volunteer died when his bomb prematurely exploded in a house on Barcroft Park, Newry.

7th September 1974: A civilian was shot dead during an IRA sniper attack on a British patrol in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

8th September 1974: A Catholic man died three weeks after being shot on Newington Street, Belfast. A piece of cardboard was found nearby that had written on it: “this is the penalty for a sexual assault on a child of seven years old at the Waterworks”. After the shooting a caller rang the Irish News and said it had been a “punishment shooting” carried out by the IRA.

16th September 1974: The IRA shot dead a judge and a Martin McBirney, a magistrate, in Belfast. The judge was shot dead at his home in Beechlands and the magistrate was shot dead at his home on Belmont Road.

22nd September 1974: The IRA shot dead a former prison officer at his home on Hillmount Gardens, Belfast.

29th September 1974: Twenty-three mortar bombs were launched by the IRA at a British Army facility in Crossmaglen. The facility was also hit by automatic fire. The attack was to be combined with an air strike that was eventually called off.

29th September 1974: An aerial bombing was attempted on the British Army base at Crossmaglen by two IRA members who hijacked a three-seat Cessna plane from a flying club at Dundalk, while another two IRA men remained on the ground to prevent the members of the club from raising the alarm. The IRA unit loaded the aircraft with four cylinder bombs and forced the pilot to fly over the border. The attack failed after the hijackers became lost, and one of them launched a bomb five miles away from the intended target before flying back to the Republic. The dropping of the bomb was witnessed by British soldiers manning a border outpost. The Cessna eventually made a safe landing in a field near Ravensdale, County Louth. The strike was intended to support the mortar attack on the same compound.

5th October 1974: A civilian was killed during an IRA sniper attack on an RUC patrol at Greenhaw Road, Derry.

5th October 1974: Guildford pub bombing – four British soldiers and a civilian were killed and 182 were hurt when the IRA bombed a pub frequented by off-duty soldiers. Four people, dubbed the “Guildford Four”, would be convicted for the bombing and imprisoned for life. Fifteen years later Lord Lane of the Court of Appeal would overturn their convictions noting “the investigating officers must have lied”. Some had spent the entire 15 years in prison, years after the IRA volunteers who carried out the attacks came forward. No police officer was ever charged.

8th October 1974: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb on West Street in Stewartstown, County Tyrone.

21st October 1974: The IRA kidnapped and shot dead a British Territorial Army soldier in Belfast. His body was found in a derelict house.

23rd October 1974: A British soldier died three weeks after being shot by an IRA sniper on Racecourse Road, Derry.

28th October 1974; The IRA detonated a van bomb outside the British Army base at Ballykinlar in County Down, killing two soldiers.

30th October 1974: An IRA volunteer died when his bomb prematurely exploded at a garage on Strand Road, Derry.

6th November 1974: An IRA sniper shot dead two patrolling British soldiers in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

7th November 1974: Two British soldiers were killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb at an electricity substation near Stewartstown, County Tyrone.

7th November 1974: An off-duty British soldier and a civilian were killed when a bomb was thrown through the window of the Kings Head pub in Woolwich, England. Twenty-eight people were injured. Two British soldiers were killed by a bomb near Stewartstown, County Tyrone.

12th November 1974: Two civilians who worked for the British Army were found shot dead by the side of Sheriffs Road near Derry.

14th November 1974: An IRA volunteer died after the bomb he was planting outside a telephone exchange in Coventry exploded prematurely.

15th November 1974: A patrolling British soldier was killed by an IRA sniper in Townsend Street Strabane.

16th November 1974: A patrolling UDR soldier was killed by an IRA sniper in Newry.

20th November 1974: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in Craigavon, County Armagh.

21st November 1974: The Birmingham pub bombings kill 19 people. The “Birmingham Six” would be tried for this and convicted. Many years later, after new evidence of police fabrication and suppression of evidence, their convictions would be quashed and they would be released. The IRA has never claimed responsibility.

2nd December 1974: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb in a field near Derrylin, County Fermanagh.

2nd December 1974: An IRA volunteer was wounded when her bomb prematurely exploded in a house on Crawford Square, Derry. She died on 7th December.

7th December 1974: An IRA volunteer died when his bomb prematurely exploded in a house on Bridge Street, Derry.

14th December 1974: IRA snipers shot dead a RUC officer & Rifleman Michael Edward Gibson, 20. Royal Green Jackets Soldier fatally shot in chest 14/12/1974 – died 29/12/74 #OTD

On joint visit with RUC David (Jim) McNeice, also murdered and died on date of attack. RUC car hit x23 as they drove from a house after visiting regarding report of a burglary at Drumintee Road, Killeavy, Forkhill, South Armagh, Northern Ireland.

17th December 1974: An IRA bomb exploded at Tottenham Court Road, London, killing a passer-by.

21st December 1974: A bomb was defused in Harrods department store in Knightsbridge, London. second bomb was defused in the King’s Arms public house in Warminster, Wiltshire.

22nd December 1974: The IRA leadership declared a temporary ceasefire, pending talks with British government officials. Shortly before the ceasefire came into effect, the IRA bombed the London home of the Conservative Party leader and former Prime Minister Edward Heath.

29th December 1974: Rfn Michael Gibson, died of his wounds, Shot along with a RUC constable at Forkhill on joint patrol, 14th December.

1975

10th January 1975: The British Army shot dead unarmed IRA volunteer John Francis Green in a shed in Castleblaney in County Monaghan. The incident is notable as British troops crossed the border to kill an unarmed IRA man at his home.

20th January 1975: IRA volunteer Kevin Coen was shot dead by the British Army in Fermanagh.

21st January 1975: Two IRA volunteers driving along Victoria Street, Belfast were killed when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely. There were also a series of bomb attacks across Belfast.

24th January 1975: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack on Colinward Street, Belfast.

31st January 1975: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

8th February 1975: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol in the village of Mullan, County Fermanagh.

10th February 1975: The IRA leadership declare a truce. The ceasefire was to last officially until 23rd January 1976, however it was not respected by all IRA units and violence continues throughout the year.

27th February 1975: Off-duty police officer Stephen Tibble was shot dead as he joined in the chase of a suspect on his motorbike in Barons Court, London. The suspect had been spotted by a detective coming out of a house which was later discovered to be an IRA bomb factory.

17th March 1975: An unarmed IRA volunteer was shot dead by the Irish Army while attempting to escape from Portlaoise Prison, County Laois.

24th March 1975: A post office official was shot dead when he arrived at the scene of a robbery at the post office in Silverbridge, County Armagh. It is alleged that the IRA was responsible and that the gunmen thought he was an RUC officer.

25th April 1975: A UDA member was shot dead as he walked along Bachelor’s Walk in Portadown, County Armagh. Gunmen, thought to be IRA volunteers, pulled-up alongside him in a car and opened fire. Although the Sutton Database lists him as a civilian, Lost Lives lists him as a “high-ranking local UDA member”.

2nd May 1975: A UDA member was shot dead by the IRA at Ardoyne Bus Depot in Belfast.

10th May 1975: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot-patrol on Waterloo Road in Derry.

18th May 1975: An IRA volunteer was stabbed to death in a lane by the UVF in a lane outside Rathfriland, County Down.

31st May 1975: The IRA kidnapped and shot dead one of their own members from Belfast who they alleged was an informer. His body was returned to his family by the IRA in 1999.

3rd June 1975: A UDR soldier and two civilians were found shot dead in a car in Killeen, County Armagh. The IRA are believed to have been responsible. The UDR soldier was also a member of the Orange Order.

4th June 1975: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by British soldiers outside the British Army barracks in Bessbrook, County Armagh.

10th June 1975: A UVF member was shot dead by the IRA in a shop on the Crumlin Road in Belfast.

7th July 1975: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Lurgan, County Armagh.

12th July 1975: A UDA member was found shot dead on Old Templepatrick Road at Ballyutoag, County Antrim. He was a doorman at a UDA club. It is believed the IRA was responsible. Although the Sutton Database lists him as a civilian, Lost Lives lists him as UDA member.

17th July 1975: The IRA killed four British soldiers in a remote controlled bomb attack near Forkill, County Armagh.

2nd August 1975: The IRA shot dead a former UDR soldier near his home in Moy, County Tyrone. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

13th August 1975: Four Protestant civilians and a member of the UVF were killed in a gun and bomb attack on the Bayardo Bar in Belfast.

13th August 1975: The IRA kidnapped and shot dead a former RUC officer in County Armagh. His body was found near Newtownhamilton on 15th August 1975. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

15th August 1975: The IRA shot dead a Protestant civilian at Camrick Bar on Market Street, Armagh town. He was a close friend of Harris Boyle, one of the UVF men killed the month before in the Miami Showband massacre. He and Boyle were often seen together. The IRA said it killed him because of an alleged association with Captain Robert Nairac and claimed it was in possession of his diary, which had been stolen in Portadown.

27th August 1975: A bomb exploded without warning at the Caterham Arms public house in Caterham, Surrey, England. Ten off-duty British soldiers and 23 civilians were injured.

28th August 1975: Seven people were injured when a bomb exploded in Oxford Street, London. A telephone warning was issued to The Sun newspaper five minutes before the explosion.

29th August 1975: A British Army bomb-disposal expert attached to the police was killed attempting to defuse an IRA bomb which had been left in a shoe shop on Kensington Church Street, Kensington, London.

30th August 1975: The IRA shot dead a UDR soldier near Whitecross, County Armagh.

31st August 1975: The IRA shot dead a UDR soldier on his farm near Keady, County Armagh, He was also a member of the Orange Order.

5th September 1975: Two people are killed and 63 injured when an IRA bomb exploded in the lobby of the Hilton hotel in London.

8th September 1975: A UDA member was shot dead by the IRA in the Markets area of Belfast.

3rd October 1975: A bomb exploded at a shop on Albertbridge Road in Belfast, which was owned by Red Hand Commandos leader John McKeague. A Catholic civilian was hurt and died of her injuries on 6th October 1975. It is believed that the IRA was responsible.

6th October 1975: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA bomb attack near Limavady, in County Londonderry.

9th October 1975: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on a British Armoured Patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

9th October 1975: A civilian was killed when an IRA bomb exploded outside Green Park tube station in London, England.

10th October 1975: A UDA member was shot dead in his home by an IRA unit on the Ormeau Road in Belfast.

14th October 1975: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Portadown, County Armagh.

29th October 1975: The IRA shot dead an Official IRA (OIRA) volunteer, in McKenna’s Bar in the Markets area of Belfast. Between 29th October 1975 and 12th November 1975, 11 people were to die in the continuing feud between the two wings of the IRA. Most of those killed were members of the ‘official’ republican movement.

31st October 1975: The IRA shot dead an OIRA volunteer in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

31st October 1975: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the OIRA in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

3rd November 1975: The IRA shot dead a Republican Clubs member in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast. Part of the ongoing IRA/OIRA feud.

3rd November 1975: A 33 year old lawyer was injured by a car bomb in Connaught Square, London W2.

6th November 1975: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

9th November 1975: The IRA shot dead an OIRA volunteer in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

10th November 1975: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper outside Gough British Army Base at Carramoyle, County Armagh.

11th November 1975: The IRA shot dead an OIRA volunteer, A Republican Clubs member and his relative in separate attacks in Belfast. Part of the ongoing IRA/OIRA feud.

12th November 1975: A civilian was killed when an IRA unit threw a bomb into Scott’s Restaurant on Mount Street, in the upper-class Mayfair area of London.

16th November 1975: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA landmine attack on a patrol in Sixmilecross in County Tyrone.

18th November 1975: Two civilians were killed when an IRA unit threw a bomb into Walton’s Restaurant on Walton Street, in the Chelsea area of London.

21st November 1975: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb when he picked up a rifle which was left in an abandoned car in Forkill, County Armagh.

22nd November 1975: Three British soldiers were killed in a gun battle when an IRA unit attacked their undercover observation post at Drummuckavall, County Armagh. ( Drummuckavall ambush ).

25th November 1975: Two RUC officers were killed when their patrol was caught in an IRA sniper ambush in Pomeroy, County Tyrone. In a separate incident a British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Fountain area of Derry City.

27th November 1975: The IRA killed businessman and TV personality Ross McWhirter, who with his brother Norris McWhirter, had offered reward money to anyone who would inform on the IRA.

1st December 1975: Two IRA volunteers died when killed when the bomb they were transporting exploded accidentally on King Street in Belfast.

6th December 1975: Two IRA volunteers died when the landmine they were setting exploded accidentally in Killeen, County Armagh.

6th–12th December 1975: Four IRA volunteers held two people hostage in the Balcombe Street Siege.

18th December 1975: The IRA killed two British soldiers in a bomb attack in Derry. It was later established that the soldiers had been lured out of the sangar by children who offered them sweets. While they were distracted the IRA lowered a bomb onto the roof of their sangar which exploded a few minutes later.

Sourced from Wikipedia, Google and You Tube Credit to BBC Squaddies on The Front Line

The Continuity Irish Republican Army or Continuity IRA (CIRA)

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Mar 062015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

The Continuity Irish Republican Army or Continuity IRA (CIRA) is an Irish republican paramilitary group that aims to bring about a united Ireland. It emerged from a split in the Provisional IRA in 1986 but did this group did not become active until the Provisional IRA ceasefire of 1994. It is an illegal organisation in the Republic of Ireland and is designated a terrorist organisation in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and the United States. It has links with the political party Republican Sinn Féin (RSF).

Like the Provisional IRA before it, the CIRA sees itself as the direct continuation of the original Irish Republican Army and styles itself as simply “the Irish Republican Army” in English or Óglaigh na hÉireann (Volunteers of Ireland) in Irish. It sees itself as the national army of an Irish Republic covering the whole of Ireland. The security forces initially referred to it as the “Irish National Republican Army” (INRA).

Since its formation, the CIRA has waged a campaign in Northern Ireland against the British Army and the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), formerly the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC). This is part of a wider campaign against the British security forces by “dissident republican” paramilitaries. It has targeted the security forces in gun attacks and bombings, as well as with grenades, mortars and rockets. The CIRA has also carried out bombings with the goal of causing economic harm and/or disruption, as well as many punishment attacks on alleged criminals.

To date, it has been responsible for the death of one PSNI officer. However, the CIRA is not as big and has not been as active as the Real IRA and there have been a number of splits within the organisation since the mid-2000s.

1986 IRA General Army Convention

The Continuity IRA has its origins in a split in the Provisional IRA. In September 1986, the Provisional IRA held a meeting of its General Army Convention (GAC), the organisation’s supreme decision-making body. It was the first GAC in 16 years. The meeting, which like all such meetings was secret, was convened to discuss among other resolutions, the articles of the Provisional IRA constitution which dealt with abstentionism, specifically its opposition to the taking of seats in Dáil Éireann (the parliament of the Republic of Ireland). The GAC passed motions (by the necessary two-thirds majority) allowing members of the Provisional IRA to discuss and debate the taking of parliamentary seats, and the removal of the ban on members of the organisation from supporting any successful republican candidate who took their seat in Dáil Éireann.

The Provisional IRA convention delegates opposed to the change in the constitution claimed that the convention was gerrymandered “by the creation of new IRA organisational structures for the convention, including the combinations of Sligo-Roscommon-Longford and Wicklow-Wexford-Waterford.” The only IRA body that supported this viewpoint was the outgoing IRA Executive. Those members of the outgoing Executive who opposed the change comprised a quorum. They met, dismissed those in favour of the change, and set up a new Executive. They contacted Tom Maguire, who had supported the Provisionals against the Official IRA (see Irish republican legitimatism), and asked him for support. Maguire had also been contacted by supporters of Gerry Adams, then and now president of Sinn Féin, and a supporter of the change in the Provisional IRA constitution.

Maguire rejected Adams’ supporters, supported the IRA Executive members opposed to the change, and named the new organisers the Continuity Army Council. In a 1986 statement, he rejected “the legitimacy of an Army Council styling itself the Council of the Irish Republican Army which lends support to any person or organisation styling itself as Sinn Féin and prepared to enter the partition parliament of Leinster House.” In 1987, Maguire described the “Continuity Executive” as the “lawful Executive of the Irish Republican Army.”

Campaign

Although much smaller than the Real IRA, the Continuity IRA is regarded by British intelligence as “Dangerous and Capable of more violent acts”. (CN) The Continuity IRA has been behind a number of attacks, including the shooting dead of PSNI Constable Stephen Carroll, who was shot dead on the 9th of March 2009 as he responded to a 999 call in Craigavon. He was the first police officer to be killed since the signing of the Belfast Agreement. He was killed two days after the Real IRA killing of two British soldiers outside Massereene Barracks in Antrim. In a press interview with Republican Sinn Féin some days later, regarded by some to be the political wing of the Continuity IRA, Paddy Walsh claimed these were “acts of war”.

In 2013 the Continuity IRA’s ‘South Down Brigade’ threatened a Traveller family in Newry and it published a statement in the local newspaper. There was negotiations with community representatives and the CIRA announced the threat was lifted. It was believed the threat was issued after a Traveller feud which resulted in a pipe bomb attack in Bessbrook, near Newry. The Continuity IRA is believed to be mainly strong in the County Fermanagh – North County Armagh area (Craigavon, Armagh and Lurgan). It is believed to be behind a number of attacks such as pipe bombings, rocket attacks, gun attacks, and the PSNI claimed it orchestrated riots a number of times to lure police officers into areas such as Kilwilkie in Lurgan and Drumbeg in Craigavon in order to attack them. It also claimed the group orchestrated a riot during a security alert in Lurgan. The alert turned out to be a hoax.

Claim to legitimacy
Irish republican legitimatism

Thus, similar to the claim put forward by the Provisional IRA after its split from the Official IRA in 1969, the Continuity IRA claims to be the legitimate continuation of the original Irish Republican Army or Óglaigh na hÉireann. This argument is based on the view that the surviving anti-Treaty members of the Second Dáil delegated their “authority” to the IRA Army Council in 1938. As further justification for this claim, Tom Maguire, one of those anti-Treaty members of the Second Dáil, issued a statement in favour of the Continuity IRA, just as he had done in 1969 in favour of the Provisionals. J. Bowyer Bell, in his The Irish Troubles, describes Maguire’s opinion in 1986: “abstentionism was a basic tenet of republicanism, a moral issue of principle. Abstentionism gave the movement legitimacy, the right to wage war, to speak for a Republic all but established in the hearts of the people”. Maguire’s stature was such that a delegation from Gerry Adams sought his support in 1986, but this was rejected.

Relationship to other organisations

These changes within the IRA were accompanied by changes on the political side and at the 1986 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis (party conference), which followed the IRA Convention, the party’s policy of abstentionism, which forbade Sinn Féin elected representatives from taking seats in the Oireachtas, the parliament of the Republic, was dropped. On the 2nd of November, the 628 delegates present cast their votes, the result being 429 to 161. The traditionalists, having lost at both conventions, walked out of the Mansion House, met that evening at the West County Hotel, and reformed as Republican Sinn Féin (RSF).

According to a report in the Cork Examiner, the Continuity IRA’s first chief of staff was Dáithí Ó Conaill, who also served as the first chairman of RSF from 1986 to 1987. The Continuity IRA and RSF perceive themselves as forming a “true” Republican Movement.

Structure and status

The leadership of the Continuity IRA is believed to be based in the provinces of Munster and Ulster. It was alleged that its chief of staff was a Limerick man and that a number of other key members were from that county, until their expulsion. Dáithí Ó Conaill was the first chief of staff in 1991. In 2004 the United States (US) government believed the Continuity IRA consisted of fewer than fifty hardcore activists. In 2005, Irish Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform Michael McDowell told Dáil Éireann that the organisation had a maximum of 150 members.

The CIRA is an illegal organisation under UK (section 11(1) of the Terrorism Act 2000) and ROI law due to the use of ‘IRA’ in the group’s name, in a situation analogous to that of the Real Irish Republican Army (RIRA). Membership of the organisation is punishable by a sentence of up to ten years imprisonment under UK law. On the 3st1 May 2001 Dermot Gannon became first person to be convicted of membership of the CIRA solely on the word of a Garda chief superintendent. On the 13th of July 2004, the US government designated the CIRA as a ‘Foreign Terrorist Organization’ (FTO). This made it illegal for Americans to provide material support to the CIRA, requires US financial institutions to block the group’s assets and denies alleged CIRA members visas into the US.

External aid and arsenal

The US government suspects the Continuity IRA of having received funds and arms from supporters in the United States. Security sources in Ireland have expressed the suspicion that, in co-operation with the RIRA, the Continuity IRA may have acquired arms and material from the Balkans. They also suspect that the Continuity IRA arsenal contains some weapons that were taken from Provisional IRA arms dumps, including a few dozen rifles, machine guns, and pistols; a small amount of the explosive Semtex; and a few dozen detonators.

Weaponry

Like the Real IRA, the Continuity IRA still retains on to some weapons some of its members stole from Provisional IRA dumps after they defected. However it was believed in 1999 and 2000 that members of the Continuity IRA and members of the Real IRA traveled a number of times to Croatia in the former Yugoslavia to purchase some arms with a contact they had established. It was widely believed that some of those arms including Yugoslavian Plastic Explosives such as TM-500, Yugoslavian M70AB1’s and M70AB2’s (Yugoslavian variants of the AK47 and AKM rifles), Czech Vz 26’s sub machine guns, RPG 18 rocket launchers and a quantity of ammunition managed to be smuggled safely to Ireland.

The Gardaí later discovered some of this equipment belong mainly to the Real IRA in bunkers and training camps in County Meath. Real IRA member Alan Ryan, aged 19, was arrested at an underground training camp in County Meath. Ryan would later rise to become a prominent member of the Real IRA in Dublin only to be killed in a violent feud with Dublin Criminals in 2012. In 2000 Croatian police stopped a truck carrying a consignment of arms believed to be destined for the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA. The footage featured in a BBC Spotlight Documentary in 2003 about Dissident Republicans. It is believed that the Continuity IRA still holds on to some of the arms that managed to get through.

Much of its weaponry is believed to be mostly of Provisional IRA origin such as the Romanian AKM rifles the Provisional IRA managed to receive from Libya. Many of these weapons can be frequently seen in Real IRA and Continuity IRA propaganda videos or photographs taken by journalists who managed to interview members of the Continuity IRA and are found usually when arms are uncovered by British or Irish security forces.

Activities

Chronology events of Continuity Irish Republican Army actions
Initially, the Continuity IRA did not reveal its existence, either in the form of press statements or paramilitary activity. Although the Garda Síochána had suspicions that the organisation existed, they were unsure of its name, labelling it the “Irish National Republican Army”. On the 21st of January 1994, on the 75th anniversary of the First Dáil Éireann, Continuity IRA volunteers offered a “final salute” to Tom Maguire by firing over his grave, and a public statement and a photo were published in Saoirse Irish Freedom.

It was only after the Provisional IRA declared a ceasefire in 1994 that the Continuity IRA became active, announcing its intention to continue the campaign against British rule. The CIRA continues to oppose the Good Friday Agreement and, unlike the Provisional IRA (and the Real IRA in 1998), the CIRA has not announced a ceasefire or agreed to participate in weapons decommissioning—nor is there any evidence that it will. In the 18th Independent Monitoring Commission’s report, the RIRA, the CIRA and the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) were deemed a potential future threat. The CIRA was labelled “active, dangerous and committed and… capable of a greater level of violent and other crime”. Like the RIRA and Óglaigh na hÉireann, it too sought funds for expansion. It is also known to have worked with the INLA.

The CIRA has been involved in a number of bombing and shooting incidents. Targets of the CIRA have included the British military, the Northern Ireland police service (Royal Ulster Constabulary, Police Service of Northern Ireland) and Ulster loyalist paramilitaries. Since the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 the CIRA along with other paramilitaries apposing the ceasefire, have been involved with a countless number of punishment shootings and beatings. By 2005 the CIRA was believed to be an established presence on the island of Great Britain with the capability of launching attacks. A bomb defused in Dublin in December 2005 was believed to have been the work of the CIRA. In the February of 2006, the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC) blamed the CIRA for planting four bombs in Northern Ireland during the final quarter of 2005, as well as several hoax bomb warnings. The IMC also blamed the CIRA for the killings of two former CIRA members in Belfast, who had stolen CIRA weapons and established a rival organisation.

The CIRA continued to be active in both planning and undertaking attacks on the PSNI. The IMC said they tried to create troubles to lure police forth, while they have also taken to stoning and using petrol bombs. In addition, other assaults, robbery, tiger kidnapping, extortion, fuel laundering and smuggling were undertaken by the group. The CIRA also actively took part in recruiting and training members, including disgruntled former Provisional IRA members. As a result of this continued activity the IMC said the group remained “a very serious threat”.

On the 10th of March 2009 the CIRA claimed responsibility for the fatal shooting of a PSNI officer in Craigavon, County Armagh—the first police fatality in Northern Ireland since 1998. The officer was fatally shot by a sniper as he and a colleague investigated “suspicious activity” at a house nearby when a window was smashed by youths causing the occupant to phone the police. The PSNI officers responded to the emergency call, giving a CIRA sniper the chance to shoot and kill officer Stephen Carroll

Internal tension and splits

In 2005, several members of the CIRA, who were serving prison sentences in Portlaoise Prison for paramilitary activity, left the organisation. Some transferred to the INLA landing of the prison, but the majority of those who left are now independent and on E4 landing. The remaining CIRA prisoners have moved to D Wing. Supporters of the Continuity IRA leadership claim that this resulted from an internal disagreement, which although brought to a conclusion, was followed by some people leaving the organisation anyway. Supporters of the disaffected members established the Concerned Group for Republican Prisoners in their support. Most of those who had left went back to the CIRA, or dissociated themselves from the CGRP. The group is now defunct.

In the February of 2006, the Independent Monitoring Commission claimed in a report on paramilitary activity that two groups, styling themselves as “Óglaigh na hÉireann” and “Saoirse na hÉireann”, had been formed after a split in the Continuity IRA. The Óglaigh na hÉireann group was responsible for a number of pipe bomb attacks on the PSNI, bomb hoaxes, and robberies. The Saoirse na hÉireann group was responsible for a number of bomb hoaxes. The groups had apparently ceased operations by early 2009.
The Continuity IRA was responsible in 2007 for shooting dead of two of its members who left the organisation and attempted to create their own organisation. Upon leaving the CIRA, they had allegedly taken a number of guns with them. The Continuity IRA is believed by Gardaí to have been involved in a number of gangland killings in Dublin and Limerick. Recent internal feuds and splits have seen organisations such as the RCIRA (Real Continuity IRA) being formed in the Limerick area and organisations such as Óglaigh na hÉireann (which ceased operating around 2009, not be confused with another more active group, also called Óglaigh na hÉireann) and Saoirse na hÉireann, a group which also ceased around that time. A Republican Sinn Féin member even remarked that splits aren’t uncommon in the Continuity IRA as some individuals think they should be in a leading position of the group. (CN)

In the July of 2010, members of a “militant Northern-based faction within the CIRA” led by a well known member from south Derry claimed to have overthrown the leadership of the organisation. They also claimed that an Army Convention representing “95 per cent of volunteers” had unanimously elected a new 12-member Army Executive, which in turn appointed a new seven-member Army Council. The moves came as a result of dissatisfication with the southern-based leadership and the apparent winding-down of military operations. A senior source from Republican Sinn Féin said: “We would see them [the purported new leadership] as just another splinter group that has broken away.”

In the June of 2011, Liam Kenny, a member of this Limerick based breakaway Continuity IRA faction, was murdered, allegedly by drug dealers, at his home in Clondalkin, West Dublin. On the 28th of November 2011 an innocent man was mistakenly shot dead in retaliation for the murder of Liam Kenny. Limerick activist Rose Lynch (a member of the same breakaway Continuity IRA faction based in and lead from Limerick) pleaded guilty to this murder at the Special Criminal Court and was sentenced to life imprisonment.

In the July of 2012 the leadership of the CIRA announced it had a new leadership after expelling members who had been working against the organisation.

In 2013 former CIRA member Kieran McManus in West Belfast was shot dead by the CIRA. In the April of 2014 a former leading member of the Belfast Continuity IRA, Tommy Crossan, who had been expelled from the organisation, was shot dead.

In popular culture
The CIRA are depicted in RTE’s TV series crime drama Love / Hate as a paramilitary organisation that runs extortion rackets from pubs and criminal gangs in Dublin.

The group started operations in 1994, after the Provisional Irish Republican Army began a ceasefire.

Chronology Events of the

Continuity Irish Republican Army

actions

1994 to 2014

1994

19th December 1994: The CIRA detonated a 2 lb semtex bomb in Enniskillen.

1995

7th February 1995: A small bomb was planted by the CIRA on Newry.

1996

6th January 1996 : The Irish Republican Publicity Bureau issued a statement saying ‘a reborn Irish Republican Army had emerged led by the “Continuity Army Council”‘.

13th July 1996 : The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a 1,200 lb car bomb outside Kilyhelvin Hotel in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. The blast caused serious damage and injured 17 people as they were being evacuated from the hotel.

29th September 1996: The CIRA claimed responsibility for abandoning a 250 lb car bomb in Belfast. Security forces made the device safe using a controlled explosion.

21st November 1996: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a 600 lb bomb in Derry. It failed to explode and was made safe by the security forces.

1997

31st July 1997: The CIRA planted a bomb (estimated at between 500 and 1,000 lb) in the grounds of Carrybridge Hotel near Lisbellaw, County Fermanagh. It was defused by the British Army.

9th August 1997: The CIRA planted a hoax van bomb on Craigavon Bridge in Derry, shortly before the start of the Apprentice Boys’ parade through the city. Disturbances broke out during the march when loyalist bandsmen broke ranks to attack nationalist residents who were watching the parade.

16th September 1997: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a 400 lbs van bomb outside the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) base in Markethill, County Armagh. The bombing happened a day after Sinn Féin joined the political negotiations which led to the Good Friday Agreement.

30th October 1997: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a holdall bomb in an office of a government building in Derry. The bag contained a quantity of Semtex and petrol, but failed to detonate properly.

20th November 1997: The CIRA planted a small bomb behind Belfast City Hall. The Progressive Unionist Party claimed the device was aimed at their ground floor office.

1998
(Note: For some of the incidents in 1998, it is unclear whether the Continuity IRA, the Real IRA, or both organizations were responsible.)

6th January 1998: A 500 lb car bomb was defused by the security forces in the centre of Banbridge, County Down. A telephoned warning had been sent.

24th January 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a car bomb exploded outside the ‘River Club’ on Factory Road in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. The building was extensively damaged, but there were no injuries. It is believed the CIRA was responsible.

20th February 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 500 lb car bomb exploded outside the RUC base in Moira, County Down. Seven RUC officers and four civilians were hurt. The blast caused widespread damage.

23rd February 1998: Following a telephoned warning, a 300 lb car bomb exploded near the RUC base on Edward Street in Portadown, County Armagh. The blast caused widespread damage but no injuries.

20th March 198: A bomb was left in the Northern Bank on Guildhall Square in Derry, and the area was cleared for four hours while the British Army defused it. The CIRA claimed responsibility and said a Republican had tried to stop the CIRA members from planting the bomb.

4th May 1998: There was an attempted mortar attack on Grosvenor Road RUC base in Belfast. One of the mortars fell short of the target and the other exploded in its launch tube.

9th May 1998: There was a mortar attack on the RUC base in Belleek, County Fermanagh. The mortars fell short of their target and one exploded as the RUC was clearing the area. There were no injuries.

15th May 1998: A car and trailer bomb were abandoned in Kinawley, County Fermanagh. The British Army recovered and made safe two mortars, containing between 100 lb and 150 lb of explosives. It is believed the CIRA was responsible.

4th September 1998: The CIRA claimed to have launched an attack on an RUC patrol on Moy Road, between Portadown, County Armagh and Moy, County Tyrone. The RUC denied any knowledge of an attack in the area.

1999

14th January 1999: There was a gun attack on Woodbourne RUC base in Belfast. Four men were later arrested. It is believed the CIRA was responsible.

4th February 1999: Channel 4 documentary Dispatches showed a CIRA propaganda video, which included members armed with a hand-held grenade launcher, an AK-47 assault rifle and a Magnum revolver.

4th May 1999: There was a gun attack on Lisnaskea RUC base in County Fermanagh. It is believed the CIRA was responsible.

1st June 1999: A telephone warning using a recognised CIRA codeword claimed a 500 lb bomb had been left in Russell Street, Armagh. The RUC searched the area disrupting rush hour traffic, but no bomb was found.

27th December 1999: Approximately 20,000 people were evacuated from Kempton Park Racecourse following a bomb alert. The CIRA was blamed.

2000

6th February 2000: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a bomb at Mahon’s Hotel in Irvinestown, County Fermanagh. A telephoned warning was sent and the hotel was evacuated beforehand.

25th February 2000: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a bomb attack on Shackleton British Army Barracks in Ballykelly, County Londonderry. It caused slight damage but no injuries. Three gas cylinders packed with explosives found at the scene failed to detonate.

10th May 2000: The CIRA issued a statement calling on the Provisional IRA to disband and hand its weapons over to those who were “prepared to defend the Republic”.

19th May 2000: A series of bomb alerts caused serious disruption in Belfast. Telephoned warnings, allegedly from the CIRA, claimed bombs had been left in several locations including the BBC studios at Broadcasting House. British Army bomb disposal experts carried out several controlled explosions before declaring the area safe.

31th October 2000: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a pipe bomb outside Castlewellan RUC base in County Down. It was hidden under a traffic cone and badly injured an RUC officer.

17th December 2000: The CIRA was believed to have been responsible for leaving a booby-trap pipe bomb on a mountain road in Kilcoo, County Down. A telephoned warning was sent and the bomb was defused by security forces.

2001

19th July 2001: A bomb was thrown from a car and up to six shots fired during an attack on Castlewellan RUC base in County Down. The station suffered minor damage but there were no injuries.

2nd August 2001: Former Social Democratic and Labour Party MLA Eamonn O’Neill had his family car attacked with CIRA slogans in Castlewellan, County Down. It is believed the attack happened after O’Neill criticised a CIRA attack on the village’s RUC base in the weeks previous.

30th October 2001: Two gunmen, claiming to be from the CIRA, hijacked a bus in Belfast and ordered the driver to drive to Woodbourne RUC base. The men fled leaving a holdall estimated to contain 5 kg of explosives. The security forces tried to defuse the bomb but it exploded during the operation. Damage was restricted to the bus and the gates of the base, and there were no injuries.

16th December 2001: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a small bomb outside a Customs and Excise office on the Killyhevlin Industrial Estate in County Fermanagh. A telephoned warning had been sent. The office was unmanned at the time and there were no injuries.

2002

14th January 2002: Over 1,000 pupils were sent home from Boys Model School in Belfast following a hoax bomb warning. The caller claimed to be from the CIRA.

21st January 2002: The CIRA was linked to a gun attack in a pub in Ardglass, County Down. Two masked gunmen entered the pub and fired shots into the ceiling before leaving. It was claimed that they were searching for a leading member of a rival republican group, intent on killing him.

12th March 2002: The CIRA were suspected off holding a family hostage in Downpatrick, County Down.

17th April 2002: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a bomb at a police training college in Belfast. The blast damaged gates and fencing.

24th July 2002: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a bomb on the estate of Unionist peer Alan Brooke. A small crater was found after a three day search of the 1,000-acre (4.0 km2) estate at Brookeborough, County Fermanagh.

2nd September 2002: The CIRA was blamed for a gun attack on PSNI and British Army personnel in Downpatrick, County Down. Up to five shots were fired as they searched houses in the Model Farm Estate. Nobody was injured.

25th October 2002: The CIRA was blamed for leaving a van bomb near Windsor House in Belfast. A telephone warning was sent. Witnesses reported a muffled explosion came from the van shortly before the arrival of bomb disposal experts, who then carried out a controlled explosion.

2003

8th January 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a large firebomb at a waterworks on Castleblayney Road in Keady, County Armagh. A telephone warning was sent and the bomb was defused by security forces.

13th January 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a firebomb outside a supermarket in Dungannon, County Tyrone. It was made safe by security forces.

2nd February 2003 : The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a bomb at the perimeter fence of a Territorial Army base in south Belfast. Another bomb attached to the fence was defused by security forces.

7th February 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for leaving a car bomb on Blacks Road, Belfast. The M1 motorway was closed while security forces made it safe.

10th February 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a small bomb at the back of the town hall in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. A telephone warning was sent. Three PSNI officers were hurt.

18th February 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for throwing two nail bombs over the perimeter fence of Antrim Road PSNI base in north Belfast. One exploded, causing minor damage, and the other was defused.

19th February 2003: A pipe bomb was found on the roof of Woodbourne PSNI base in Belfast. It was unclear when the device was thrown. The CIRA claimed responsibility.

7th May 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for throwing a coffee jar bomb at a PSNI patrol car in Armagh. It failed to explode.

14th October 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting an incendiary car bomb outside the PSNI base on York Road, Belfast. It was made safe by security forces.

24th November 2003: The CIRA claimed responsibility for exploding a bomb outside a British Army base in Dungannon, County Tyrone. A telephone warning was sent. Two PSNI officers were hurt while trying to clear the area.

2004

14th June 2004: The CIRA was blamed for exploding a 50 lb bomb at a golf clubhouse in Lurgan, County Armagh. The golf club was closed at the time and the bomb caused minor damage.

15th September 2004: A suspect car was found in the New Lodge area of Belfast following a telephone warning from the CIRA. The security forces carried out controlled explosions on the car.

2005

1st January 2005: The CIRA claimed responsibility for an attempted firebomb attack on Grosvenor Road PSNI base in Belfast. Two gunmen forced a taxi driver to drive the bomb to the base. It was made safe by security forces.

20th January 2005: The CIRA was believed to have been responsible for planting a pipe bomb under a van at Belcamp Crescent, Dublin. It was made safe by security forces. Two men were arrested nearby.

5th July 2005: A telephone caller, claiming to be from the CIRA, said a bomb had been thrown at a PSNI vehicle the day before in Keady, County Armagh. Security forces examined a suspicious device on Kinelowen Street, but later declared it was an elaborate hoax.

12th July 2005: The CIRA was blamed for attacking PSNI officers with blast bombs during rioting in the Ardoyne area of Belfast, following an Orange Order parade. Eighty officers were injured, one seriously, and several people were arrested.

6th November 2005: In a telephoned warning, the CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a hoax bomb during the Down Royal horseracing festival. The festival was abandoned.

8th December : A suspected CIRA member was arrested while driving a bomb through Dublin. Gardaí believe the device was intended for use against drugs gangs in the city. The man, Martin O’Rourke, was subsequently sentenced to seven years imprisonment for possession of an explosive device.

26th December 2005: The CIRA again sent a hoax bomb alert to a horse race at Down Royal. The site was evacuated but nothing was found.

2006

9th November 2006: The CIRA was believed to be responsible for firing shots at a PSNI base in Keady, County Armagh.

7th December 2006: The CIRA was believed to be responsible for planting a pipe bomb outside a PSNI base in Lurgan, County Armagh. It failed to explode.

2007

12th March 2007: The CIRA shot dead two of its former members in response to the establishment of a rival group.

11th November 2007: The IMC blamed the CIRA for a coffee jar bomb during a British Army remembrance service in Newry. The explosives were detonated inside the barrel of a ceremonial cannon during the traditional 11am silence.

2008

2nd January 2008: A CIRA unit fired a volley of shots over the grave of ex-RSF President Dan Keating at Kiltallagh Cemetery. The event was carried out to coincide with what would have been his 106th birthday.

13th February 2008: The IMC said the CIRA was responsible for orchestrating rioting and public disorder in Newry and Craigavon, during which PSNI officers came under attack from youths armed with bricks, bottles, stones and paint-bombs.

22nd March 2008: CIRA members fired a volley of shots at a commemoration in Edencork, County Tyrone.

14th June 2008: The CIRA claimed responsibility for an attempted a landmine attack on a PSNI patrol-car in Rosslea, County Fermanagh. The landmine partially exploded as the car passed, injuring two officers.

19th July 2008: The CIRA threatened to shoot civil servants from Northern Ireland’s Driver & Vehicle Agency for co-operating with the PSNI.

16th August 2008: The CIRA claimed responsibility for firing a rocket-propelled grenade at a PSNI patrol in Lisnaskea, County Fermanagh. It partially exploded, lightly hurting three officers.

25th August and 26th August 2008: The IMC blamed the CIRA for orchestrating civil disturbances, hijackings and rioting in Craigavon, County Armagh. It said that it believed the CIRA tried to lure police officers into positions where they could be attacked. A number of shots were fired during the disturbances.

4th October 2008: The IMC blamed the CIRA for a roadside bomb near Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh.

5th November 2008: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a blast-bomb attack against Lurgan PSNI base. There were no injuries.

26th November 2008: The CIRA issued threats against community workers who co-operate with the PSNI in north Belfast.

2009

12th January 2009: The CIRA fired shots at a house on the Grosvenor Road, Belfast.

14th January 2009: The CIRA claimed responsibility for destroying a JCB digger at Casement Park, Belfast. It was destroyed after the contractor refused to pay protection money to the group.

29th January 2009: The IMC blamed the CIRA for an armed robbery in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

10th February 2009: The CIRA is believed to have been responsible for leaving three pipe bombs on Shiels Street, off the Falls Road in Belfast. They were made safe by the British Army.

10th February 2009: The IMC blamed the CIRA for a hoax bomb alert in Armagh town.

3rd March 2009: The CIRA was blamed for the discovery of pipe bombs at a house in the Phibsboro area of Dublin.

9th March 2009: The CIRA claimed responsibility for shooting dead a PSNI officer in Craigavon. The officer was shot by a sniper as he and a colleague investigated a complaint of broken windows in a nearby home. This was the first police fatality in Northern Ireland since 1998.

17th May 2009: A member of the CIRA fired a volley of shots over the grave of Jim Gallagher in Derry.

15th June 2009: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a failed bomb attack against the PSNI base in Armagh town. A bomb was thrown at the base but failed to detonate properly.

13th July 2009: An armed CIRA member appeared at a riot in Armagh town.

21st September 2009: The IMC claimed the CIRA was responsible for the armed robbery of a bank in Belleek, County Donegal.

12th October 2009: The IMC blamed the CIRA for the punishment shooting of a man in his home in Belfast.

20th November 2009: The CIRA claimed responsibility for shooting a man three-times in the leg in a punishment attack in Belfast.

23rd December 2009: The IMC blamed the CIRA for the punishment shooting of a man in Belfast. The man had been convicted for a role in the death of a shopkeeper two years earlier.

2010

7th January 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for the punishment shooting of a man in Armagh town.

18th January 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for the punishment shooting of a man in Lurgan.

4th April 2010: Sixteen CIRA prisoners along with other republican prisoners barricaded themselves in the dining hall of Maghaberry Prison. The protest was in response to conditions in the prison. The stand-off ended after two days, when prison staff raided the room.

5th April 2010: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a failed car bomb attack on Crossmaglen PSNI base. A telephoned warning was given and the bomb was made safe by the British Army.

13th April 2010: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a failed car bomb attack on Newtownhamilton PSNI base. A telephoned warning was given and the bomb was made safe by the British Army.

4th May 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for exploding a pipe bomb outside Lurgan PSNI base. The base was unscathed but a nearby building was damaged.

17thy May 2010: The CIRA were blamed for orchestrating rioting in Lurgan. Two blast bombs and several petrol bombs were thrown at PSNI officers. Six officers suffered minor injuries.

31st May 2010: The CIRA were blamed for shooting a man in the leg at Juniper Park, Belfast.

9th June 2010: It was reported that an “unauthorised” meeting was held by disgruntled CIRA members who were allegedly seeking to set up a breakaway paramilitary group and carry out more military action. Some disgruntled members also allegedly tried to seize the offices of Republican Sinn Féin and its newspaper, Saoirse. In a statement, the CIRA leadership said that it expelled or suspended those involved.

16th June 2010: The CIRA claimed responsibility for a bomb that partially exploded outside a house in the Finglas area of Dublin.

18th June 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for shooting a man in the chest in West Befast. The man was shot as he tried to run away from three masked men.

11th July 2010: The CIRA was blamed for orchestrating rioting in the Broadway area of Belfast in the run-up to the 12th of July Orange Order marches. A PSNI officer was badly wounded by shotgun fire, which was also blamed on the CIRA.

13th July 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for firing shots at PSNI officers during rioting in Belfast.

22nd July 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for a pipe bomb attack on Woodbourne PSNI base in Belfast.

28th July 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for the kidnapping and punishment shooting of a man in Belfast.

28th July 2010: In an interview with the Irish Times, members of a “militant Northern-based faction within the CIRA” claimed to have overthrown the leadership of the organization. They also claimed that an Army Convention representing “95 per cent of volunteers” had unanimously elected a new 12-member Army Executive, which in turn appointed a new seven-member Army Council. The moves came as a result of dissatisfication with the southern-based leadership and the apparent winding-down of military operations. A senior source from Republican Sinn Féin said: “We would see them [the purported new leadership] as just another splinter group that has broken away.”

2nd August 2010: The CIRA was blamed for a blast bomb attack on Craigavon PSNI base.

14th August 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for a bomb attack that injured three children in Lurgan. The PSNI received a warning that a bomb had been left in the grounds of Lurgan Model Primary School. This device was found to be a hoax. Shortly after, a bomb exploded inside a bin on North Street, where the PSNI had set-up a cordon. Three children (aged twelve and two), who were walking past at the time, were hurt by debris and suffered shock.

24th August 2010: The IMC blamed the CIRA for an attempted pipe bomb attack on Woodbourne PSNI base in Belfast. The device failed to explode.

11th September 2010: The CIRA claimed responsibility for the punishment shootings of two men in the Ardoyne area of north Belfast.

29th September 2010: A CIRA firing party fired a volley of shots over the grave of veteran republican Paul Stanley in Straffan, County Kildare.

17th November 2010: The CIRA ordered a man to leave the country within a week or face being killed, this came after a CIRA attack on the man in Tallaght, Dublin.

2011

16th March 2011: The CIRA was blamed for the punishment beating of a heroin dealer in Clondalkin, Dublin.

6th July 2011: The CIRA were blamed for hijacking vehicles and firing shots at a police patrol during disturbances in Craigavon. The trouble started after Republican Sinn Féin president Des Dalton was arrested during a public meeting.

17th September: The CIRA claimed responsibility for firing a rocket-propelled grenade at a PSNI vehicle in Craigavon. The alleged attack happened on Lake Road, between roundabouts one and two of Craigavon, shortly after midnight. There were no reports of injuries.

2012

26th July 2012: The Continuity IRA released a statement claiming that a new leadership (Army Council) had been elected.

2013

25th January 2013: The CIRA claimed responsibility for firing shots at the PSNI in the Drumbeg estate in Craigavon.

30th March 2013: A small bomb exploded near PSNI landrovers in the Kilwilkie area of Lurgan. It had been hidden in a bin. The PSNI were monitoring an unnotified march that included masked CIRA members.

6th April 2013: The CIRA claimed responsibility for shooting dead a former member in West Belfast. Kieran McManus was killed by a masked man welding a shotgun in front of his 16 year old brother. The Continuity IRA claimed he was killed for “terrorising his community with knives, hatchets and swords”. In a telephone statement the Northern command of the CIRA claimed it was prepared to kill former members if they engaged in anti-social behaviour and criminal activity using the Continuity IRA’s name.

2014

14th March 2014: The CIRA claimed responsibility for planting a booby-trap bomb under a PSNI officer’s car in Belfast. The bomb was found after it fell off the car on Blacks Road. The CIRA added that it “has had a complete reorganization […] and is now in a position to sustain and carry out attacks on occupational forces throughout Ireland”.

Sourced from Wikipedia

 

Northern Ireland Part Two (1976–1981)

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Mar 052015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

1976 to 1981

13th January 1976: Two IRA volunteers, along with two civilians, were killed when the bomb they were transporting exploded prematurely in North Street, Belfast.

17th January 1976: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun attack on a British checkpoint in Derry City.

17th January 1976: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in the Andersonstown area of Belfast. The IRA claimed he was an informer.

22nd January 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Claudy, County Londonderry.

22nd January 1976: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon, County Tyrone. The IRA claimed he was an informer.

23rd January 1976: The IRA ceasefire was officially called off.

30th January 1976: A civilian was killed when an IRA carbomb exploded outside Klondyke Bar, a pub frequented by loyalist paramilitaries in the Sandy Row area of Belfast.

6th February 1976: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA gun attack on their patrol in the Cliftonville area of Belfast.

7 thFebruary 1976: Two civilians were killed when they triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb, which had been placed in a crashed car in Cookstown, County Tyrone. The bomb was intended for members of the security forces.

12th February 1976: IRA volunteer Frank Stagg (34) died on his 62nd day of hunger strike in Wakefield Prisonin England.

12th February 1976: An RUC Officer was shot dead in an IRA gun-attack on a foot-patrol in Claudy, County Londonderry.

13th February 1976: An IRA volunteer died in a premature explosion in the Falls Road area of Belfast. Three mortars hit Fort Monagh British Army base in West Belfast. There were no casualties.

15th February 1976: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while escaping from a gun attack on the Ballygomartin Road in Belfast.

22nd February 1976: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during an attempted hijacking of her car near Killeen, County Armagh.

26th February 1976: Joseph McCullough, a UDR soldier, was stabbed to death by an IRA unit while arriving to his farm in Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. IRA member Anthony McCooey, later convicted for taking part in the killing, claimed that another IRA man slit the soldier throat with a bayonet. McCullough was also a member of the Orange Order. In 1998, author Toby Harnden interviewed a Real IRA member which told him that McCullough was targeted because he supplied the Loyalist with arms and was also involved in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings of 1974.

27th February 1976: A UVF member was shot dead by the IRA in a drive-by shooting in the Donegall Pass area of Belfast.

27th February 1976: A civilian was wounded when he triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb in a derelict house on Landseer Street, Belfast. The man was an electricity meter-reader and accidentally triggered the anti-handling device on a bomb hidden in the meter box. It is believed a British foot-patrol was the intended target. The man died on 28th February.

7th March 1976: The IRA launched six mortar rounds into Belfast International Airport, injuring an RUC member and damaging cars in a parking area and the arrival lounge door.

10th March 1976: Former UDA spokesman Sammy Smyth was shot dead by the IRA on Alliance Avenue in Belfast.

13th March 1976: An ex-British soldier was shot dead on Alliance Avenue in Belfast.

15th March 1976: A Tube-train driver was shot dead by the IRA shortly after a bomb exploded prematurley on his train.

18th March 1976: The IRA attacked a British base in the Creggan area of Derry with nine mortars and sniper fire.

30th March 1976: A British soldier was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb left near an Orange Order hall at Ballygargan, County Armagh.

31st March 1976: Three British soldiers were killed when their patrol-vehicle detonated an IRA landmine near Belleeks, County Armagh.

1st April 1976: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack in Castledawson, County Londonderry.

2nd April 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Maghera, County Londonderry.

5th April 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his home near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

5th April 1976: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the RUC shortly after carrying out a bomb attack on the Conway Hotel in Dunmurry, County Antrim.

6th April 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack on a British mobile-patrol near Middletown, County Armagh.

7 thApril 1976: Three civilians were killed when IRA fire bombs exploded in their Drapery shop at The Square in Dromore, County Down. They lived above the shop. The owner was a member of the Royal Black Perceptory.

15th April 1976: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army shortly after having been arrested near Forkill, County Armagh.

16th April 1976: Two civilians were killed when a bomb exploded inside their workplace on Servia Street, Belfast. Although no group claimed responsibility it was reported that the blast was likely caused by “an IRA bomb stored on the premises”.

19th April 1976: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA in Dunmurry, County Antrim.

22nd April 1976: An RUC Officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in Coalisland, County Tyrone.

29th April 1976: A UDR soldier and a civilian were killed in an IRA gun-attack in Dunamony, County Tyrone.

15th May 1976: Three RUC officers were killed in an IRA landmine attack on their patrol in Belcoo, Fermanagh. Another RUC officer was killed in a sniper attack in Warrenpoint, County Down.

16th May 1976: The IRA shot dead an RUC officer outside his home in Derryfubble, County Tyrone. Two civilians were shot dead as they stood outside a social club on Alliance Road, Belfast.

17th May 1976: An IRA volunteer was killed when British soldiers opened fire on a bus in the Strand Road, Derry.

21st May 1976: A civilian was killed when a bomb exploded on a train near Moira, County Down. A warning was given but the bomb detonated before the area could be evacuated.

22nd May 1976: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA gun attack in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

2nd June 1976: Two RUC officers were shot dead in separate IRA attacks in Derry and Belfast.

2nd June 1976: A UDA member was shot dead at his home on the Shankill Road in Belfast by an IRA unit.

11th June 1976: Four British bases in Belfast were attacked with mortars and gunfire within minutes of each other. Several British soldiers were hurt and an IRA volunteer was shot.

19th June 1976: A UDA member was shot dead at his home in Dunmurry, County Antrim.

28th June 1976: A British soldier was killed when the landing zone of his helicopter-borne patrol was the subject of an IRA landmine attack near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

30th June 1976: A British soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun-attack on the Springfield Road in Belfast.

30th June 1976: An IRA volunteer was killed during an attack on a British patrol when a grenade he was handling exploded prematurely.

1st July 1976: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in the Finaghy area of Belfast. The IRA claimed he was an informer.

3rd July 1976: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while manning a checkpoint on Butcher Street in Derry.

6th July 1976: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Hannahstown, Belfast. The IRA claimed he was an informer.

7th July 1976: Two senior RUC officers were seriously injured after an IRA double agent led them to an arms dump outside Portadown. When the officers picked up one of the weapons it triggered a booby trap which detonated. One of the officers lost an arm, a leg and an eye in the explosion.

17th July 1976: Two IRA volunteers died when the bomb they were transporting exploded accidentally near Castlederg, Tyrone.

18th July 1976: A civilian was killed by a booby-trap bomb planted in the laneway of his home at Drumgole, County Fermanagh. It is thought that the bomb was planted by the IRA and was meant for two close relatives who were RUC reserve officers.

21st July 1976: An IRA landmine killed Christopher Ewart-Biggs, the newly appointed British ambassador to the Republic of Ireland, and his secretary Judith Cook. A British soldier was also killed in a bomb attack in Derry City.

30th July 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Moneymore, County Londonderry.

31st July 1976: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper on Church Street in Lurgan.

8th August 1976: A British soldier was killed by an IRA bomb hidden in a booby-trapped bicycle in Crossmaglen.

10th August 1976: An IRA volunteer was killed when he was shot while escaping from a British Army patrol. After being shot his car went out of control, crashing and killing three children.

11th August 1976: A civilian was killed during an IRA gun attack on a British observation post at Meenan Square, Derry.

19th August 1976: There was a gun attack on the home of the Grand Master of the Orange Order at West Circular Crescent, Belfast. His son was shot and died of his wounds on 26th August 1976. The attack was blamed on the IRA. The Grand Master, a frequent critic of the IRA, was thought to have been the target.

26th August 1976: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

1st September 1976: A British Army post in Crossmaglen was hit by 10 mortars. It caused extensive damage and some British soldiers were hurt.

14th September 1976: The blanket protest began when IRA prisoner Kieran Nugent refused to wear prison clothing, in protest at the loss of Special Category Status.

18th September 1976: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit while directing traffic in Portadown.

1st October 1976: A Protestant man died one month after being shot at his relative’s house on Copperfield Street, Belfast. The Sutton Database claims he was a civilian who was shot by the IRA. However, Lost Lives claims he was a former British soldier. It also notes that a man was imprisoned for his murder but that there was no charge of IRA membership.

8th October 1976: An RUC officer and a Prison Officer were killed in IRA gun attacks in Derry.

9th October 1976: A civilian was killed when IRA fire bombs exploded in a shop on Bridge Street, Ballymena.

13th October 1976: The IRA shot dead a UVF member outside his home in Annaghmore, County Armagh. IRA volunteers opened fire on his car as he arrived home. Although the Sutton Database lists him as a civilian, Lost Lives lists him as a UVF member and notes that he had received a two-year suspended sentence for handling ammunition which he was said to have bought from a UDR soldier. His son was wounded in the attack and died on 25th October 1976.

16th October 1976: Garda Michael Clerkin was killed in a booby-trap bomb attack in Mountmellick, near Portlaoise in County Laois.

16th October 1976: Three IRA volunteers died when a bomb they were transporting exploded accidentally at Belfast Gas Works.

24th October 1976: Two British soldiers were killed when an IRA sniper team ambushed a British patrol in Ardoyne, Belfast.

26th October 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead at his workplace on Eglish Street, Armagh town.

28th October 1976: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA gun-attack in Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

2nd November 1976: An Undercover RUC Officer was shot dead by the IRA on the Falls Road in Belfast.

7th November 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home on Abercorn Road, Derry.

9th November 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead in an IRA gun-attack in Desertmartin, County Londonderry.

11th November 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Kilrea, County Londonderry.

11th November 1976: A former IRA quartermaster was shot dead inside a social club on Saul Street, Belfast. He allegedly gave information to the RUC under interrogation and was then ordered to leave the district. It was reported he was shot for repeatedly returning to the district.

15th November 1976: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA sniper attack on a British foot-patrol in Lurgan.

18th November 1976: A UDR soldier was shot dead in an IRA attack in Altnagelvin, Derry.

27th November 1976: In Lurgan, a civilian accidentally triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to a derelict house on Mary Street that had been used as a British Army observation post. In Derry, a civilian accidentally triggered an IRA booby-trap bomb left in an entry off Lecky Road. The IRA admitted planting the Derry bomb, which was also intended for the security forces. Apologising, the IRA statement said that when it was clear the bomb plan had failed they had contacted the British Army and a local priest. Soldiers and the priest had then warned people to stay away.

1st December 1976: An IRA rocket hit a British APC in Belfast. No injuries were reported.

3rd December 1976: An RUC Officer was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon.

11th December 1976: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in the Bogside area of Derry.

15th December 1976: An RUC Officer was shot dead by an IRA unit while manning a security barrier in Portadown.

1977

1st January 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Crossmaglen. The IRA also carried out a car bomb attack at Harmin Park, Newtownabbey. A civilian was killed after an inadequate warning was given.

9th January 1977. A British soldier was killed in an IRA booby trap bomb attack on his patrol near Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh.

11th January 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper at a security barrier in the Oldpark area of Belfast.

14th January 1977: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA bomb attack in Innishrush, County Londonderry.

16th January 1977: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by undercover British soldiers near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

19th January 1977: A number of IRA booby trap bombs targeted security force members.

27th January 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit on the Strand Road in Derry.

29th January 1977: Seven IRA bombs explode in Londons West End. Warnings are given and there are no casualties.

2nd February 1977: Jeffery Agate (59), then Managing Director of the American Du Pont factory in Derry was shot dead by members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) outside his home at Talbot Park, Derry. This killing marked the beginning of a series of attacks on businessmen. There were further killings on 2nd March 1977 and 14th March 1977.

4th February 1977: An IRA bomb factory is discovered by police in Liverpool, England.

5th February 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in Gilford, County Down.

12th February 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit in Cloughmills, County Antrim.

23rd February 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA unit in the Waterside area of Derry City.

24th February 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA unit while manning a security barrier in Lurgan, County Armagh.

26th February 1977: A Judge was shot dead by the IRA in Newry.

27th February 1977: An ex-British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

2nd March 1977: A senior English businessman was shot dead by the IRA in Belfast.

4th March 1977: A senior Judge was shot dead by the IRA in Coalisland, Tyrone.

9th March 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA on his farm near Caledon, Tyrone.

10th March 1977: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during a bomb attack on a business on York Street, Belfast.

13th March 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in Lisnaskea, County Fermanagh.

14th March 1977: A senior English businessman was shot dead when his car was ambushed by an IRA unit in Belfast. 15th March 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA unit in Bellaghy, County Londonderry.

25th March 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA unit in Coalisland, County Tyrone.

28th March 1977: A civilian was shot dead by an IRA unit in Crosskeys, County Antrim. Her son, an RUC officer, was the intended target.

4th April 1977: A British soldier was killed in an IRA landmine attack on an Armoured Personnel Carrier near Belleek, County Fermanagh.

6th April 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead while driving a vehicle in the Northland Road area of Derry City.

8th April 1977: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA ambush in Moneymore, County Londonderry.

9th April 1977: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in Hannahstown, near Belfast. The IRA claimed he was a British informer.

10th April 1977: The relative of an OIRA volunteer was shot dead by the IRA in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast. This was part of an ongoing feud.

15th April 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the City Cemetery in Dery City.

17th April 1977: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by a British Army sniper on Flax Street in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

23rd April 1977: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the British Army while in a car park in the Stewardstown area of Belfast.

29th April 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

3rd May 1977: A civilian was found shot dead in a field off Glen Road, Belfast. He was shot by the IRA as it is believed he was an informer.

5th May 1977: An ex-British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

12th May 1977:A Judge was shot dead by the IRA in Rosslea, County Fermanagh.

14th May 1977: Undercover British Army and SAS operative Captain Robert Nairac was captured by the IRA in south County Armagh. He was shot dead. His body has never been found.

20th May 1977: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead while driving a school bus in near Benburb, County Tyrone.

21st May 1977: An ex-RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in the Lisburn Road area of Belfast.

30th May 1977: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in College Square, Belfast. He was mistaken for an off-duty member of the British Army.

2nd June 1977: Three members of a Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) mobile patrol were shot dead by Irish Republican Army (IRA) snipers near Ardboe, County Tyrone. Part of ongoing attacks on Police and Army.

8th June 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA after leaving the Victoria Hospital on the Falls Road, Belfast.

22nd June 1977: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA in a drive-by attack outside the Crumlin Road Prison in Belfast.

29 thJune 1977: Two British soldiers were killed when their patrol was ambushed by IRA snipers outside North Howards Street British Army base in Belfast.

6th July 1977: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while sitting in a stationary patrol vehicle in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.

22nd July 1977: A Prison Officer was shot dead in Ballymoney, County Antrim.

27th July 1977: The IRA shot dead a UDR soldier at his home on Woodvale Avenue, Belfast.

27th July 1977: The IRA shot dead a Republican Clubs (political wing of OIRA) member at Alexander House, Belfast. Part of a republican feud.

27th July 1977: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the OIRA as he drove along Divismore Crescent, Ballymurphy. Part of a republican feud.

9th August 1977: Fianna Éireann (IRA youth wing) volunteer Paul McWilliams was shot dead by a British Army sniper in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

9th August 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper outside Henry Taggart British Army base in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

10th August 1977: The IRA planted a small bomb in the grounds of the New University of Ulster, which Queen Elizabeth II was visiting. The bomb exploded shortly after the Queen had left. There were no injuries.

12th August 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast.

22 ndAugust 1977: A civilian was kidnapped from his home near Crossmaglen by the IRA and shot dead. The IRA claimed he was a British informer.

28th August 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on foot patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

31st August 1977: Cpl. William Smith. Was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on a British Army mobile patrol in the Antrim Road area of Belfast.

7th September 1977: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA in a bar in Dublin. The IRA claimed he was an informer.

8th September 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Finaghy area of Belfast.

13th September 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while driving a vehicle in Gortin, County Tyrone.

25th September 1977: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Brantry, County Tyrone.

7th October 1977: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA in the Wellington Park area of Belfast.

8th October 1977: A female UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Tynan, County Armagh.

12th October 1977: The IRA shot dead a civilian near Ballygawley, County Tyrone. The victim was mistaken for an off-duty UDR soldier.

18th October 1977: An ex-RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA near Keady, County Armagh.

19th October 1977: The IRA shot dead a civilian at his home on Ainsworth Pass, Belfast. The motive for the killing remains unclear.

2nd November 1977: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack in Magherafelt, County Londonderry.

11th November 1977: The IRA detonated a car bomb on King Street, Belfast. A warning was given to evacuate the area although one civilian was killed.

15th November 1977: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while visiting his mother in Andersonstown, Belfast.

3rd December 1977: Seamus Twomey, a former Chief of Staff of the IRA was arrested in Dublin.

14th December 1977: An Undercover British soldier was shot dead in an IRA ambush in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast.

21st December 1977: Five hotels across Northern Ireland were damaged when IRA fire-bombs exploded in them.

22nd December 1977: The IRA announced a Christmas ceasefire.

1978

12th January 1978: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Newry.

13th January 1978: The IRA seriously damaged the Guildhall in Derry in a bomb attack. There were no injuries.

23rd January 1978: A number of British soldiers were wounded and had to be airlifted to hospital following an IRA mortar attack on Forkill British Army/RUC base in County Armagh. The mortars were fired from a flat-bed truck and hit the sleeping quarters. Afterwards, three RUC officers were hurt by a booby-trap bomb planted in the truck.

30th January 1978: A supermarket employee was shot and wounded during a robbery of the premises in Killygordon, County Donegal. The man died of his injuries five days later.

4th February 1978: A civilian was accidentally shot dead during an IRA attack on an RUC foot patrol on Shore Road, Belfast.

7 thFebruary 1978: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

8th February 1978: A UDR soldier and his 10-year-old daughter were killed in an under-car booby-trap bomb attack outside their home in Maghera, County Londonderry.

17th February 1978: Eleven Protestant civilians and an RUC officer were killed and 23 badly injured in the La Mon Restaurant Bombing, at Gransha near Belfast.

corden_lloyd_fs17th February 1978:  Lieutenant Colonel Corden- Lloyd. Was killed and two other soldiers injured when the Gazelle helicopter he was travelling in was attacked by an IRA unit. The helicopter crashed while taking evasive manoeuvers during the engagement.

26th February 1978: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by an undercover British Army unit at an arms-dump in Ardboe, County Tyrone.

28th February 1978: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA sniper attack in the Rosemount area of Derry City.

1st March 1978: A British soldier was killed in an IRA machine-gun attack on British Army patrol on the Clifton-park Avenue in Belfast.

3rd March 1978: The IRA launched a gun attack on a British Army checkpoint on Donegall Street, Belfast. A civilian who helped the British Army to search people was shot dead.

4th March 1978: 11009210_10206312174226227_6451137565509609122_nRfn. Nicholas Smith. Was killed in a booby-trap bomb attack in Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The soldier was killed while attempting to remove an Irish flag from a telegraph poll. The flag was wired to a landmine below the poll and exploded when it was removed.

17th March 1978: An IRA unit and an SAS unit became embroiled in a gun battle in a field near Maghera, County Londonderry. One British soldier was killed in the battle. Prominent IRA member Francis Hughes was wounded and arrested after the shoot out.

14th April 1978: A UDR soldier was shot dead while driving a school bus near Pomeroy, County Tyrone.

15th April 1978: An RUC officer was killed in a booby-trap bomb attack outside his home near Armoy, County Antrim.

22nd April 1978: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Lisburn.

(24th April 1978: Major Thomas Fowley Died of natural causes whilst on duty)

25th May 1978: Two civilians were kidnapped by the IRA in Belfast and later killed and secretly buried. Their remains were found in 1999 in County Monaghan. It was revealed that the two had been executed for robbing an IRA-run bar. They had also admitted stealing IRA weapons for use in robberies, but had apparently handed back the weapons and any money they gained from robberies.

3rd June 1978: An alleged criminal was shot dead by the IRA near Jonesborough, County Armagh.

10th June 1978: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by undercover British soldiers while hijacking a car in the Bogside area of Derry City.

16th June 1978: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in the Foyle Street area of Derry.

17th June 1978: An IRA unit ambushed an RUC vehicle near Camlogh, County Armagh. One RUC officer was killed outright and another was captured. The IRA gave back the body of the second officer on the 9th of July. A post-mortem revealed that he had in fact died of his wounds soon after the ambush. The second officer was also a member of the Orange Order.

20th June 1978: Three IRA volunteers and a passing UVF member were shot dead by undercover British soldiers during an attempted bombing at a Post Office depot on Ballysillan Road, Belfast.

25th June 1978: A UDR soldier was shot dead by during a bomb and sniper ambush of a British military convoy near Belcoo, County Fermanagh.

4th July 1978: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA outside Castlederg RUC barracks in County Tyrone.

12th July 1978: A British soldier was killed in an IRA radio-controlled booby-trap bomb attack while on foot-patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

19th July 1978: A British soldier was killed in an IRA remote-controlled bomb attack in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

2nd August 1978: An RUC officer was shot dead in an IRA drive-by shooting while on foot-patrol in Ballymena, County Antrim.

8th August 1978: A civilian was wounded when a bomb exploded near her home on Forfar Street, Belfast. It is thought that it was planted by the IRA and meant for a British Army patrol. She died of her wounds on 27th September 1978.

11th August 1978: An undercover British soldier was shot dead in an IRA ambush on the Letter kenny Road in Derry.

17th August 1978: A British soldier was killed in an IRA car bomb attack on a British patrol in Forkill, County Armagh.

19th August 1978: Two ex-British soldiers were killed in IRA gun attacks in Belfast and Keady.

5th September 1978: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Newry.

11th September 1978: The IRA shot dead an off-duty RUC officer in Loughmacrory, County Tyrone.

21st September 1978: The IRA carried out a large bomb attack against Eglington airfield. The Terminal building, two hangars and four planes were destroyed in the attack. There were no injuries.

28th September 1978: The IRA launched a gun attack on a British Army foot-patrol on Waterloo Place, Derry. A civilian who helped the British Army to search people was shot dead.

29th September 1978: The IRA fired shots at the car of an RUC officer in Newry. A civilian who was travelling in the car was accidentally shot dead.

6th October 1978: A UDR soldier was shot dead while at a cattlemart in Newry.

12th October 1978: A civilian was killed when the IRA bombed a train at Belfast Central station. A bomb warning was given but there was not enough time to carry out a full evacuation.

12th November 1978: A British soldier was killed when an IRA booby trap bomb detonated as a British patrol passed by in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

14th November 1978: The IRA launched a large-scale bombing offensive in towns across Northern Ireland. Serious damage was caused to the centres of Castlederg, Enniskillen, Armagh, Belfast and Cookstown. There were 37 injuries in the attacks although warnings were issued.

16th November 1978: A firefighter was killed when an IRA grenade exploded in a house which had been set alight in a bomb attack in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.

24th November 1978: An IRA volunteer was shot dead in an undercover British Army ambush in Maureen Avenue in Derry.

26th November 1978: The Deputy-Governor of Long Kesh Prison was assassinated by the IRA outside his home in Belfast.

27th November 1978: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA near Durham Street, Belfast.

30th November 1978: The IRA carried out 14 bomb attacks in towns and villages across Northern Ireland. The IRA also issued a statement saying it was preparing for a “long-war”.

1st December 1978: The IRA carried out 11 bomb attacks on towns across Northern Ireland. There were no injuries.

14th December 1978: A Prison Officer who worked at Crumlin Road Jail was shot dead by the IRA while leaving the prison.

17th December 1978: The IRA carried out bomb attacks on cities in England including Bristol, Coventry, Liverpool, Manchester and Southampton.

19th December 1978: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while guarding other soldiers who were raiding a house in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

21st December 1978: A four man IRA unit ambushed a British patrol near St. Patricks church in Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The IRA unit fired a large number of shots from three Armalites and one AK-47. Three British soldiers were killed in the ambush. The British Army unit returned fire but the IRA unit made their escape in a van which had been fitted with armour-plating.

1979

5th January 1979: Two IRA volunteers were killed in Ardoyne, Belfast, when the bomb they were transporting in a car exploded prematurely.

4th February 1979: Former prison officer Patrick MacKin (60), and his wife Violet (58), were shot dead by the IRA at their home in Oldpark Road, Belfast. This was part of an escalating campaign against prison officers, co-inciding with the Dirty protest and Blanket protest in the Maze prison.
14th February 1979: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper on the Abercorn road in Derry.

19th March 1979: An IRA unit launched a mortar attack on Newtownhamilton British army base. One British soldier was killed.

22nd March 1979: Richard Sykes, then British Ambassador to the Netherlands, and his Dutch valet, Krel Straub, were killed in a gun attack in Den Haag, Netherlands. The IRA also carried out 24 bomb attacks across Northern Ireland.

5th April 1979: Two British soldiers were killed when IRA snipers attacked Andersonstown British Army barracks in Belfast.

11th April 1979: Two British soldiers were killed when IRA snipers ambushed their armoured mobile patrol in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

13th April 1979: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Tynan, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

16th April 1979: An IRA unit shot dead a Prison Officer in Clogher, County Tyrone.

17th April 1979: Four RUC officers were killed when the IRA exploded an estimated 1,000 pound van bomb at Bessbrook, County Armagh, believed to be the largest bomb used by the IRA up to that point. Three of the officers were also a member of the Orange Order.

19th April 1979: A prion officer was killed and three others seriously injured in an IRA gun and bomb attack outside Armagh Prison. The injured officers claimed IRA volunteers later showed up at the hospital dressed as doctors to “finish them off” but ran off after one of the officers noticed them and started screaming. In Belfast a British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper.

25th April 1979: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while driving a lorry in County Tyrone.

29th April 1979: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Edendork, Tyrone.

6thMay 1979: Two undercover British soldiers were shot dead by an IRA unit in Lisnaskea, County Fermanagh. The IRA unit ambushed their car.

9th May 1979: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack on his foot-patrol in the Turf Lodge area of Belfast.

19th May 1979: An ex-UDR man was shot dead by the IRA while delivering bread to a shop in Garrison, County Fermanagh.

20th May 1979: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA utside of a church in Derry.

3rd June 1979: Two RUC officers were killed when the IRA detonated a bomb underneath their patrol vehicle near Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

6th June 1979: A UDR soldier was shot dead in an IRA attack on a British Army base on the Malone Road in Belfast.

9th June 1979: During a gun battle between the IRA and the British Army, an IRA volunteer was shot dead.

19th June 1979: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Omagh, County Tyrone.

22nd June 1979: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA near Coagh, County Tyrone.

24th June 1979: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while at his home in Markethill, County Armagh.

8th July 1979: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack on his foot patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

15th July 1979: A Catholic civilian was shot dead in the car-park of Falls Bowling Club on Andersonstown Road, Belfast. The Sutton Database claims that he was shot by the IRA. However, Lost Lives claims that the IRA denied responsibility and says that there is no obvious motive.

17th July 1979: An IRA unit launched a bomb attack on a British Army patrol in Roslea, County Fermanagh. A civilian who was in the area was killed by shrapnel.

2nd August 1979: Two British soldiers were killed by the IRA in a landmine attack at Cathedral Road, Armagh town. In Belfast an RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper.

7th August 1979: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during a raid on a bank in Tramore, County Waterford.

27th August 1979: An IRA bomb killed Earl Mountbatten of Burma at Mullaghmore, County Sligo the British Queen’s first cousin, as well as The Dowager Baroness Brabourne, Mountbatten’s elder daughter’s mother-in-law (aged 83), The Hon. Nicholas Knatchbull, Mountbatten’s elder daughter’s fourth son (aged 14) and Paul Maxwell, a 15 year old Protestant youth from County Fermanagh who was working as a crew member. On the same day, the IRA launched the Warrenpoint ambush, which resulted in the death of 18 British soldiers at Narrow Water Castle, near Warrenpoint, County Down. As a British convoy passed, the IRA unit detonated a roadside bomb, killing six soldiers. IRA sniper fire then drove the soldiers to cover behind a nearby gatehouse, where a second bomb was detonated and killed a further twelve.

28th August 1979: Four British soldiers are wounded when the IRA detonates a bomb under a bandstand in Brussels, Belgium, as British Army musicians prepare to perform.

14th September 1979: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA off the Crumlin Road in Belfast.

19th September 1979: Another Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA outside the Crumlin Road Prison in Belfast.

8th October 1979: An undercover British soldier was shot dead when his car was ambushed by an IRA unit on the Falls Road, Belfast.

12th October 1979: The IRA shot dead a solicitor as he left Andersonstown British Army/RUC base in Belfast.

15 thOctober 1979: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Roslea, County Fermanagh.

19th October 1979: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Fintona, County Tyrone.

28th October 1979: A British soldier and an RUC officer were killed when an IRA unit launched a heavy machine gun attack on Springfield Road Barracks, Belfast.

29th October 1979: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Dungannon, County Tyrone.

5th November 1979: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA outside the Crumlin Road Prison, in Belfast.

13th November 1979: A British Beaver reconnaissance aircraft was hit six times by an IRA unit which had mounted a roadblock in south County Armagh. In Crossmaglen a British soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack.

23rd November 1979: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA while at his home in Glengormley, County Antrim.

3rd December 1979: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Belfast.

16th December 1979: A landmine bomb killed four British soldiers near Dungannon, County Tyrone. Another soldier was killed by a booby-trap bomb planted in a concealed observation post in a derelict house at Forkill, County Armagh. A former member of the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR), James Fowler, was shot dead by the IRA in Omagh, County Tyrone.

17th December 1979: A Prison Officer was shot dead by the IRA off the Crumlin Road in Belfast.

22nd December 1979: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while travelling in his car in County Monaghan.

1980
2nd January 1980: An ex-British Army soldier was shot dead by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) near Bessbrook, County Armagh.

3rd January 1980 A Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officer was shot dead by the IRA on the Main Street of Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh.

6th January 1980: Three soldiers of the British Army’s Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) were killed by a landmine near Castlewellan, County Down.

12th January 1980: An RUC officer was shot dead when an IRA unit ambushed a foot patrol at Seaview football grounds in Belfast.

17th January 1980: An IRA bomb detonated prematurely on a train near Dunmurry. One of the bombers and two civilians were killed.

18th January 1980: A prison officer was shot dead by the IRA outside Derry.

26th January 1980: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

5th February 1980: An off-duty UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in County Fermanagh.

11th February 1980: Two RUC officers were killed and another was badly injured when the IRA detonated an 800 lb (360 kg) landmine on the main Rosslea – Lisnaskea road.

16th February 1980: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA unit in Bielefeld, West Germany.

6th March 1980: A former UDR soldier was shot dead on his farm at Cortynan near Tynan, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

15th March 1980: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Crossmaglen, South Armagh.

21st March 1980: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a remote controlled bomb as a British Army patrol passed by in Crossmaglen.

1st April 1980: An IRA volunteer was killed in a premature bomb explosion in Newry.

4th April 1980: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Glenbank Industrial Estate, Belfast.

9th April 1980: An RUC patrol was ambushed by an IRA unit in the Suffolk area of Belfast. One RUC officer was shot dead.

11th April 1980: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while on his way to work on Franklin Street, Belfast.

25th April 1980: The IRA shot dead a civilian at his home in the Lenadoon area of Belfast. The IRA claimed he was a British informant.

2nd May 1980: An undercover British Army unit was ambushed by an IRA unit in the Antrim Road, Belfast. In the ensuing gun battle one undercover British soldier was killed.

7th June 1980: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh.

28th June 1980: A former British soldier was shot dead by the IRA at a cattle market in County Monaghan.

1st July 1980: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the RUC while running away from Whiterock Community Centre in the Ballymurphy area of Belfast.

19th July 1980: Rfn Christopher Watson was shot dead by the IRA while off duty drinking in a pub in the Rosemount area of Londonderry.

27th July 1980: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a remote-controlled bomb as a British foot patrol crossed the Moy bridge near Aughnacloy in County Tyrone.

3rd August 1980: An off-duty British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while travelling in his car near Pettigo in County Donegal.

9th August 1980: A British soldier was killed in an IRA bomb attack on a foot-patrol in Forkhill, County Armagh.

16th August 1980: A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during a gun attack on an RUC patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

12th September 1980: An RUC officer who had been kidnapped by the IRA 12 days before was found shot dead in Newtownhamilton, County Armagh.

23rd September 1980: An RUC officer was shot dead at his home in Roslea, County Fermanagh.

10th October 1980: A UDR soldier was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb left under his car in Portadown, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

13th October 1980: A Garda Síochána officer was shot dead by the IRA in County Wexford after he attempted to stop a car containing an IRA unit.

27th October 1980: Seven republican prisoners, including Brendan Hughes, Tommy McKearney and Raymond McCartney, began the 1980 hunger strike.

11th November 1980: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA while sitting in a stationary army vehicle at Altnagelvin hospital in Derry.

26th November 1980: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA while leaving an RUC base in Derrygonnelly, County Fermanagh.

2nd December 1980: The IRA injured five people when it bombed a British Army barracks in London.

16th December 1980: IRA prisoner Gerard Tuite, who had been remanded in connection with 1978 bombing offences in London, escaped from Brixton Prison in London, along with armed robber Jimmy Moody and another prisoner.

27th December 1980: A civilian was shot dead during an IRA sniper attack on a British patrol in Strabane, County Tyrone.

1981

16th January 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Warrenpoint, County Down.

20th January 1981: A British soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while manning an observation post overlooking the Bogside area of Derry.

21st January 1981: Unionist politician Norman Stronge and his son James (who was an RUC officer) were killed in an IRA attack on their home, Tynan Abbey, near Middletown, County Armagh. Both were also members of the Orange Order.

25th January 1981: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA during an attack on a British Army pedestrian checkpoint in Berry Street, Belfast.

6th February 1981: The British coal ship Nelly M was bombed and sunk by an IRA unit while at anchor in Lough Foyle.

6th February 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead during an IRA attack in the Malone area of Belfast.

10th February 1981: An off-duty UDR soldier was killed in an IRA gun attack on the Strand Road in Derry.

23rd February 1981: An IRA volunteer was shot dead by the UVF at his home in the Falls area of Belfast.

1st March: The 1981 hunger strike began in the Maze Prison when IRA prisoner Bobby Sands refused food.

2nd April 1981: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA booby-trap bomb attack near Bessbrook, County Armagh.

7th April 1981: A masked gunman shot dead a woman who was collecting forms for the 1981 United Kingdom census at Anderson Crescent, Derry. Irish republicans were boycotting the census, which was being held during the 1981 hunger strike. Sinn Féin said the shooting was the work of people “frantically attempting to discredit the election campaign of hunger striker Bobby Sands”. The RUC said that the gun had been used in two IRA “punishment shootings”.

10th April 1981: Bobby Sands was elected Member of Parliament at Westminster for the Northern Ireland constituency of Fermanagh and South Tyrone in a by-election. The moderate nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party had decided not to run a candidate in protest at the British government’s handling of the protest, which left Sands as the only Irish nationalist candidate. Sands had been on a hunger strike for Special Category Status for 41 days prior to being elected.

16th April 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Moy, County Tyrone.

28th April 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while traveling in a British Army vehicle in Castlewellan, County Down.

5th May 1981: Bobby Sands died after 66 days on hunger strike. His death caused riots in many parts of Northern Ireland, and also in the Republic of Ireland. An estimated 100,000 people attended his funeral.
5th May 1981: One IRA volunteer was injured and another arrested in a gun battle in south County Armagh. Twelve undercover British soldiers opened fire on a three-man IRA unit which resulted in a gun battle which lasted several minutes. The British troops fired nearly 700 rounds.

6th May 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in the Duncairn Gardens area of Belfast.

8th May 1981: The IRA claimed responsibility for firing ten mortars at Newtownhamilton British Army/RUC base, County Armagh. Two British soldiers were hurt.

9th May 1981: A bomb exploded at an oil terminal in the Shetland Islands, while Queen Elizabeth II was attending a nearby function to mark the opening of the terminal.

14th May 1981: An RUC officer was killed when his patrol vehicle was hit by an IRA rocket on Springfield Road, Belfast. The rocket had been fired through the roof of the vehicle as it was driving along the road.
19th May 1981: Rfn Michael Bagshaw, Rfn Andrew Gavin, Rfn John King, L/Cpl Grenville Winstone and one other British soldier were killed when their Saracen armoured personnel carrier was destroyed by a large IRA landmine planted in a culvert underneath Chancellors Road near Newry in County Armagh. Vehicle fragments and body parts were found over a 300 yard radius.

23rd May 1981: Two British soldiers were injured when a British Army armoured vehicle was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired by an IRA unit at Andersonstown, Belfast.

25th May 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by an IRA sniper while on patrol in Gulladuff, County Londonderry.

28th May 1981: An off-duty RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Whitecross, County Armagh. He was also a member of the Orange Order. On the same day two unarmed IRA volunteers, Charles Maguire (20) and George McBrearty (24) were killed in an undercover British Army ambush in Derry.

31st May 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in the Royal Victoria hospital in Belfast.

3rd June 1981: A civilian was killed during an IRA gun attack on a British patrol in the Creggan area of Derry.

5th June 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Lisnaskea, Fermanagh.

10th June 1981: Eight IRA prisoners being held on remand at Crumlin Road Jail in Belfast escaped after taking prison officers hostage, taking their uniforms and shooting their way out of the prison using three handguns that had been smuggled in.

12th June 1981: The IRA mortared Fort Pegasus British Army barracks in Belfast.

17th June 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Beragh, Tyrone.

20th June 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while in a pub in Newry. Four mortars hit MacCrory Park British Army base in West Belfast, injuring four British soldiers. The IRA claimed responsibility and said it had evacuated a number of homes before the attack.

9th July 1981: An RUC officer was shot and wounded in an IRA gun attack on Springhill Avenue in Belfast.

10th July 1981: The IRA carried out a blast-bomb attack on Fort Pegasus British Army barracks in Belfast.
13th July 1981: A British soldier was shot and wounded in the arm by an IRA sniper in the Springhill area of Belfast.

16th July 1981: Eighteen undercover British soldiers who were waiting in ambush position for an expected IRA roadblock were themselves ambushed by a six man IRA unit near Glasdrumman in south County Armagh. The IRA fired over 250 rounds from an M60 machine gun, killing one soldier and badly wounding another.

Glasdrumman ambush: L/Cpl Gavin Dean IRA sniper near Crossmaglen.

The Glasdrumman ambush was an attack by the South Armagh Brigade of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) against a British Army observation post. It took place on the 17th of July 1981 at a scrapyard southwest of Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

Background
The crisis triggered by the hunger strikes of Provisional IRA and Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) prisoners in 1981 led to an increase in militant republican activity in Northern Ireland. British intelligence reports unveiled the IRA intentions of mounting illegal checkpoints and hijacking vehicles on the IRA-controlled roads in South County Armagh, near the Irish border. To counter it, the British Army deployed the so-called COPs (close observation platoons), small infantry sections acting as undercover units, a tactic introduced by Major General Dick Trant in 1977.

On the 6th of May 1981, a day after the death of hunger-striker Bobby Sands, one IRA member from a three-man unit was arrested while trying to set up a roadblock east of the main Belfast-Dublin highway by 12 members of the Royal Green Jackets, divided in three teams. A second volunteer crossed the border, only to be arrested by the Irish Army. The third IRA man escaped, apparently injured. A total of 689 rounds had been fired by the soldiers.

The attack

After this initial success, the army continued these tactics. On the 16th of July, another operation was carried out by 18 Royal Green Jackets soldiers. That night, four concealed positions – Alpha, Bravo, Charlie and Delta – were inserted into the Glassdrumman area, around a scrapyard along the border. The plan was that another unit – called the triggering team – would ambush any IRA unit on sight, while the other four would block the expected escape routes.

On the 17th of July the commanders in charge of Alpha and Delta teams, suspecting that the operation had been compromised by the presence of local civilians, ordered the withdrawal of his men. Shortly thereafter, Bravo team was suddenly engaged by automatic fire from an M60 machine gun and AR-15 rifles fired by six or seven IRA members. The concealed position, emplaced inside a derelict van, was riddled by more than 250 bullets. The team’s leader, Lance Corporal Gavin Dean, was killed instantly, and one of his men, Rifleman John Moore, seriously wounded. Moore was later awarded the Military Medal. The IRA members fired their weapons from across the border, 160 yards away.

Aftermath

British army commanders concluded that “it was not worth risking the lives of soldiers to prevent an IRA roadblock being set up.” The incident also exposed the difficulties of concealing operations from local civilians in South Armagh, whose sympathy with the IRA was manifest. Several years later, the IRA would repeat its success against undercover observation posts in the course of Operation Conservation in 1990.

31st July 1981: A former RUC officer shot dead at a house in the Ballycolman area of Strabane.

2nd August 1981: An RUC officer was killed when his patrol vehicle struck an IRA landmine near Omagh, Tyrone. A British soldier lost both legs when his armoured vehicle was hit by a rocket.

5th September 1981: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in the Stranmills area of Belfast.

7th September 1981: Two RUC officers were killed when their patrol vehicle struck an IRA landmine near Cappagh, County Tyrone.

12th September 1981: A UDR soldier was killed in IRA gun attack in Maghera, County Derry.

14th September 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Magherafelt, County Londonderry.

26th September 1981: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Killough, County Down.

28th September 1981: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA rocket attack on a British patrol on Glen Road, Belfast.

3rd October 1981: The hunger strike was called off, due to pressure from the remaining strikers’ families who made it clear they would ask for medical intervention to save the strikers’ lives.

10th October 1981: A bomb blast at Chelsea Barracks in London killed two people and injured 40, including 23 soldiers.

17th October 1981: The Commandant General Royal Marines, Lieutenant-General Steuart Pringle, lost a leg when an IRA car bomb attached to his car exploded outside his home in Dulwich, South London.

21st October 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead outside Belfast Zoo.

26th October 1981: A bomb exploded at a Wimpy Bar in Oxford Street, London, killing the bomb disposal officer trying to defuse it.

9th November 1981: A UDR soldier was shot and wounded by the IRA in Lisnaskea, Fermanagh. The soldier died two days later.

10th November 1981: The IRA shot dead a former RUC officer outside his workplace on Loughgall Road, Armagh town. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

12th November 1981: An RUC officer lost both his legs when an IRA booby-trap bomb exploded underneath his car in Banbridge, County Down.

13th November 1981: The home of the Attorney General for England and Wales and Attorney General for Northern Ireland, Sir Michael Havers, in Woodhayes Road, Wimbledon, London, England, was bombed by the IRA. Havers and his family were in Spain at the time of the attack. A police constable standing guard outside Havers home was taken to hospital suffering from shock.

14th November 1981: The IRA killed Ulster Unionist Party MP Rev Robert Bradford, along with the caretaker of a community centre. Irish Taoiseach Dr Garret FitzGerald and former Taoiseach and opposition leader Charles Haughey condemned the killings in the Dáil Éireann. Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) party leader John Hume accused the IRA of waging a campaign of “sectarian genocide”.

17th November 1981: A UDR soldier and an RUC officer were killed in separate IRA attacks in Fermanagh and Tyrone.

19th November 1981: A UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Strabane.

28th November 1981: An RUC officer was killed in an IRA bomb attack as he patrolled the Unity Flats complex in Belfast.

Sourced from Wikipedia,  Google and Youtube

Northern Ireland Part Five (1993–1998)

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Mar 042015
 

Northern Ireland The Forgotten War

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These posts are not to promote any paramilitary group it is merely showing incidents that the RGJ might have been caught up in during their tours.

1993 to 1998

1993
5th January 1993: Three soldiers were injured by a bomb in Belfast while evacuating Belfast’s city hall area after a warning was issue by an IRA telephone call.

6th January 1993: Large parts of London were cordoned off after IRA fire-bombs exploded in a number of stores.

6th January 1993: A 25 lb explosive device went off at Dungannon, causing minor damage and no victims.

7th January 1993: The IRA attempted to detonate a bomb at an oil and gas storage depot in east Belfast. Another IRA bomb was defused in a bookshop in London.

8th January 1993: A British Army post was mortared and a helicopter attacked with machine-gun fire at Kinawley, County Fermanagh.

11th January 1993: The victim of an IRA punishment attack in Dungannon had to have one of his legs amputated.

11th January 1993: An IRA unit launched a rocket at an RUC base in south Belfast.

11th January 1993: A Protestant was shot dead while driving his car along Donaghmore Road in Dungannon, County Tyrone. The IRA claimed the man, who was a member of the Pomeroy Faith Defenders Orange Lodge, was a commander of the UVF in Tyrone and had been responsible for the killings of Catholic civilians. This was denied by the man’s family.

14th January 1993: The IRA fired a rocket at an RUC patrol in Derry.

14th January 1993: The IRA fired a mortar at an RUC base in Andersonstown, Belfast.

15th January 1993: The IRA exploded two bombs in Belfast; one of them ignited a fire that destroyed a car showrooms.

15th January 1993: An IRA bomb blast targeted an Army and RUC patrol in Main street, Carrickmore, County Tyrone, resulting in a number of injured.

19th January 1993: The IRA claimed that their militants uncovered and destroyed a British army observation post concealed in a derelict house in Drumcairne Forest, near Stewartstown, County Tyrone. The same source reported that a British helicopter and ground forces arrived to the scene shortly after, and that local residents believed that two soldiers had been injured.

20th January 1993: The IRA mortared Clogher RUC base in County Tyrone, causing considerable damage to the building.

23rd January 1993: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA while on foot patrol on Shipquay Street in Derry. He was shot twice in the back of the head at close range by a lone gunman.

23rd January 1993: An off-duty British soldier and a gunman were injured in a shoot-out at Newtownstewart, County Tyrone. The IRA claimed that a 600 lb bomb failed to explode at Cappagh, County Tyrone.

23rd January 1993: Republican sources claimed that an IRA unit fired 200 machine gun rounds on a British army outpost at CIonatty Bridge, Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh. A similar attack was carried out the next day on another observation post in Killyvilly, also in Fermanagh.

27th January 1993: An IRA bomb exploded outside Harrods, London, injuring four people.

3rd February 1993: Two small IRA bombs exploded in England. One at South Kensington underground station in London and the other at Kent House railway station.

6th February 1993: The IRA fired a Mark-16 grenade at a British Army patrol on Ross Street, Belfast.

9th February 1993: A British soldier was killed and four others badly wounded when an IRA unit detonated a remote-controlled bomb fixed to a wall as a foot patrol passed on Cathedral Road, Armagh town.

10th February 1993: A small IRA bomb exploded in a residential area of London.

12th February 1993: A bomb is thrown at British troops by an IRA unit near Cookstown, County Tyrone, but the device failed to explode.

15th February 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in the Highfields area of Belfast. He was walking down the street when a car drew alongside and fired a burst of shots from an AK-47 assault rifle, hitting the soldier four times. As he lay wounded a second gunman stepped out of the car and shot the victim three times in the head with a handgun.

( 17th February 1993: Rfn David Fenley, Death by violent or unnatural causes. )

20th February 1993: Four British soldiers were injured when their patrol vehicle was hit by a rocket in the Woodburn area of Belfast.

20th February 1993: Three Protestant civilians were shot and injured at a bar in Belfast. The IRA claimed that one of the men was a Royal Irish Regiment soldier.

21st February 1993: Dunnes Stores in the Park Centre, Belfast was fire-bombed by the IRA.

22nd February 1993: Two RUC officers were injured in an IRA bomb attack on a base in Derry.

24th February 1993: An RUC officer was killed by an IRA booby-trap bomb attached to his car in Loughgall, County Armagh. The bomb exploded as he travelled up a small hill. His legs were blown off in the explosion.

25th February 1993: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper while on joint British Army and RUC foot patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh. He was taking cover at the side of a road and when he stood up he was hit by a single bullet which struck him in the chest.

26th February 1993: A British Police Officer was shot and injured by the IRA in Warrington, England after stopping a suspect car. Three bombs later exploded at the nearby gasworks causing extensive damage.

27th February 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb at Camden Market in London; 18 people were injured.

1st March 1993: An IRA unit launched two mortar bombs at a security base in Bessbrook, County Armagh. At least three people were injured and 30 houses suffered damage.

6th March 1993: The IRA ambushed a car carrying two loyalist paramilitary figures. One was shot and wounded in the attack which took place in the Shankill area of Belfast.

7th March 1993: Four RUC officers were badly injured when the IRA detonated a car-bomb on the Main Street of Bangor, County Down.

7th March 1993: An IRA unit fired several shots on a former UDR soldier at his home in Dungannon, County Tyrone, injuring his nine-year-old son.

8th March 1993: Two RUC officers and three civilians were wounded by an IRA bomb blast in Belfast. Another RUC officer was shot and wounded at a Belfast checkpoint.

8th March 1993: The IRA launched a mortar attack on Keady British Army base, County Armagh. A civilian who was working as a contractor for the British Army was killed when three barrack buster mortars were fired into the base. The man was operating a crane when it was struck by one of the mortars.

9th March 1993: The IRA took over two houses in the Woodburn area of Belfast and fired a rocket from a window at a British foot patrol.

9th March 1993: A British soldier was shot and wounded by the IRA in east Belfast.

10th March 1993: A Protestant man was shot dead by the IRA in the Oldpark area of Belfast. The IRA claimed he was a loyalist paramilitary. Two IRA volunteers entered his shop, the first shot the man a number of times in the chest at close range and the second shot him with an AK-47 assault rifle as he lay wounded on the floor. His family denied he was a member of a loyalist paramilitary group.

13th March 1993: The IRA mortared a British Army observation post at Glasdrumman, County Armagh.

17th March 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper while on duty in Forkill, County Armagh. The patrol were in pursuit of a man who had been acting suspiciously when a single high velocity shot was fired by a sniper who is believed to have been in a nearby vehicle. The bullet hit the soldier in the side and he died a short time later. Another British soldier returned fire at the vehicle but scored no hits.

20th March 1993: Two IRA bombs exploded in Warrington, killing two children and injuring over 50 people. A coded warning was issued to the Samaritans, but police said it placed the bomb outside a Boots chemist shop in Liverpool, 16 miles (26 km) away from Boots in Warrington, where the detonation occurred.

25th March 1993: There was a multiple weapons attack by the IRA on a British Army watchtower, the Borucki sangar, in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

3rd April 1993: A British soldier was shot and injured by the IRA near Crossmaglen.

7th April 1993: Three British soldiers were wounded when the IRA mortared their base in Crossmaglen. The IRA also detonated a bomb at a Conservative Party club in London.

15th April 1993: Two IRA bombs were defused in Belfast.

20th April 1993: The IRA detonated a small bomb in Derry.

22nd April 1993: The small village of Cullaville, County Armagh, along the border with the Republic, was taken over by an IRA unit for two hours without reaction of the British forces and despite the presence of a military watchtower nearby.  ( See Occupation of Cullaville )

23rd April 1993: A small IRA bomb detonated at an Esso oil refinery in North Shields, England, causing moderate damage.

24th April 1993: The IRA detonated a huge truck bomb at Bishopsgate in the City of London, which killed one person and injured 44 more. The explosion caused damage estimated at £1bn, including the near destruction of St Ethelburga’s Bishopsgate. The Police confirmed the IRA had phoned in 18 accurate warnings before the explosion. The man who was killed was a press photographer who appears to have slipped through the security cordon to obtain footage of the explosion. The device delivered the equivalent to 1,200 kg. of TNT, and was compared with the power of a tactical nuclear device. Two bombs also exploded in hijacked minicabs in London, but nobody was injured.

25th April 1993: A former UDR soldier was killed when an IRA booby trap exploded underneath his car in Kildress, County Tyrone. The IRA claimed he had also loyalist connections.

6th May 1993: A British soldier was badly injured in an IRA car-bomb attack in Lurgan.

9th May 1993: Two IRA incendiary devices ignited in the Galleries shopping centre in Bristol, causing damage but no injuries.

12th May 1993: An IRA incendiary device partially detonated in the Cornmarket area of Oxford.

20th May 1993: A 1,000 lb (450 kg) IRA bomb exploded in Glengall Street, Belfast, causing over 5 million pounds worth of damage.

22nd May 1993: A 1,000 lb (450 kg) IRA bomb devastated Portadown town centre.

23rd May 1993: A 200 lb (91 kg) IRA bomb wrecked a hotel in south Belfast.

23rd May 1993: An IRA bomb containing over 1,500 lb (680 kg) of explosives was detonated in the centre of Magherafelt, County Londonderry, causing millions of pounds worth of damage.

26thy May 1993: A British soldier was wounded in an IRA attack in east Belfast.

31st May 1993: A British soldier was killed by the IRA when he triggered a booby trap bomb attached to his car in Moneymore, south County Londonderry, near Cookstown.

6th June 1993: Two RUC officers were injured in an IRA bomb attack in west Belfast.

6thy June 1993: The IRA mortared the RUC base in Carrickmore, County Tyrone.

7th June 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb at a gasworks in Tyneside, England.

9th June 1993: An IRA bomb exploded at a petrol storage depot in Tyneside, England. Two small IRA bombs exploded at an Esso oil refinery in North Shields.

11th June 1993: The IRA mortared Crossmaglen British Army base, County Armagh.

22nd June 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb at a hotel in Newry.

24th June 1993: A former UDR soldier died after being shot several times at close range by the IRA outside his home in Lurgan, County Armagh. He had seen his killers approaching and had his personal protection weapon drawn but had not time to use it.

26th June 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper near Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. He had been patrolling through fields when an IRA sniper fired a single high-velocity shot which hit him in the stomach. The sniper had fired from the back of a stationary vehicle.

3rd July 1993: Strabane courthouse was bombed by the IRA.

5thy July 1993: A 1,500 lb bomb caused extensive damaged in the centre of Newtownards, County Down.

10th July 1993: A barn near Dungannon was hit by an IRA mortar bomb that appeared to have gone off prematurely. A suspected IRA volunteer was later arrested at Newtownstewart while heading to the border. He was apparently injured in the mishap and admitted under armed guard at a Belfast hospital.

15th July 1993: An IRA car-bomb exploded at central station in Belfast causing extensive damage.

17th July 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper while on foot patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

18th July 1993: A large IRA car bomb was defused in the town of Banbridge, County Down, by a British Army disposal team which carried out a controlled explosion. Fifty houses were evacuated for a lapse of five hours.

25th July 1993: Riots erupted in Dungannon, County Tyrone, after a combined Army/RUC patrol came under attack by the IRA.

31st July 1993: A British Army mobile checkpoint is fired at by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper at Newtownhamilton, County Armagh. The British patrol manning the checkpoint returned fire.

12th August 1993: Five RUC officers and four civilians were wounded in an IRA attack in south Belfast.

13th August 1993: The IRA fire-bombed six premises in Bournemouth, England and also detonated a bomb on the pier.

14th August 1993: A 21 lb (9.5 kg) IRA bomb exploded outside a restaurant in Derry.

14th August 1993: An IRA bomb exploded in along the route of the Apprentice boys march in Derry.

16th August 1993: The IRA carried out a bomb attack in downtown Strabane, County Tyrone.

18th August 1993: The IRA detonated a car-bomb in Dublin Road, in the centre of Belfast city. The blast caused over 750,000 pounds worth of damage.

20th August 1993: An IRA mortar attack on Newry’s courthouse wounded ten people, among them a 10-year boy and two RUC members. The courthouse was already closed since 1985 after a previous IRA attack.

22nd August 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb on Gloucester Street, in central Belfast causing considerable damage.

23rd August 1993: The IRA detonated a car-bomb outside a bank on the Ormeau Road causing extensive damage.

27th August 1993: The IRA mortared Lisnaskea RUC barracks in Fermanagh. Over 60 nearby homes were damaged in the attack. The IRA also carried out a bomb attack against a British patrol in the Markets area of Belfast.

28th August 1993: British police defused an IRA bomb in London. The device was left within London’s brand new high-tech security barrier dubbed the “Ring of Steel”.

29th August 1993: Shots were exchanged between the Provisional and the Official IRA in the Markets area of Belfast.

31st August 1993: The IRA detonated a car-bomb at a shopping centre in south Belfast causing over 1 million pounds worth of damage. In a separate attack in Ardoyne, two British soldiers were wounded when the IRA detonated a car-bomb near their patrol.

1st September 1993: Two IRA bombs were defused by the British Army in Cullyhanna, County Armagh.

1st September 1993: An IRA bomb hits a supermarket at Derriaghy, north of Belfast, and injured two RUC officers.

3rd September 1993: A massive IRA car-bomb devastated the centre of Armagh town.

10th September 1993: Belfast’s transport links were disrupted by a number of IRA hoax alerts.

13th September 1993: The IRA bombed Stormont hotel, injuring an RUC officer and two civilians.

14th September 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb at a hotel in Strabane, causing serious damage.

15th September 1993: The IRA shot dead a Catholic man in Lisburn. They claimed he had been supplying the RUC with information on republicans.

16th September 1993: Three IRA incendiary devices were made safe in two separate cinemas in London.

21st September 1993: A British soldier was wounded when an IRA unit threw a blast-bomb at his patrol in the Ardoyne area of Belfast.

23rd September 1993: There was a fierce exchange of gunfire between a number IRA armed trucks and British Army helicopters in south County Armagh, east of Crossmaglen. The IRA units used a large number of assault rifles and at least one heavy-machine gun. All IRA volunteers managed to slip away in their vehicles, but number of weapons were confiscated in the aftermath. ( See Battle of Newry Road )

27th September 1993: A 300 lb (140 kg) IRA car-bomb caused extensive damage to the centre of Belfast. Another larger IRA car-bomb wrecked commercial premises in south Belfast.

30th September 1993: A hotel in Markethill was badly damaged in an IRA bomb attack.

1st October 1993: Six IRA firebombs detonated in commercial premises in Belfast, Lisburn and Newtownabbey.

2nd October 1993: Three IRA bombs exploded in Hampstead, north London injuring six people.

3rd October 1993: The IRA bombed a hotel in Newtownabbey, County Antrim.

4th October 1993: Five IRA bombs detonated in north London, injuring four people and destroying a number of businesses.

8th October 1993: Two IRA bombs exploded in north London.

9th October 1993: The IRA mortared a British Army base in Kilkeel, County Down. The attack came from a 12-tube Mk-15 multiple mortar.

1th October 1993: The IRA firebombed three commercial premises in Belfast and one in Lisburn.

15th October 1993: Two bombs inflicted damage on a courthouse at Cookstown, County Tyrone.

18th October 1993: The IRA bombed a restaurant in Castlederg, County Tyrone.

21st October 1993: The manager of a security firm with contracts to the British Army was shot dead by the IRA at his home in Glengormley, County Antrim.

23rd October 1993: Shankill Road bombing: eight civilians, one UDA member and one IRA volunteer (Thomas Begley) were killed when an IRA bomb prematurely exploded at a fish shop on Shankill Road, Belfast. The IRA’s intended target was a meeting of loyalist paramilitary leaders, which was scheduled to take place in a room above the shop. However, unbeknownst to the IRA, the meeting had been re-scheduled.

24th October 1993: An IRA bomb exploded on a railway line in Berkshire, England. Other devices were defused at Reading and Basingstoke stations.

25th October 1993: The IRA detonated a bomb on a bridge above a railway line in Buckinghamshire, England.

27th October 1993: An IRA unit carried out a gun attack on a British checkpoint in Derriaghy, near Belfast.

29th October 1993: A small IRA bomb exploded in Edwards Square, London.

2nd November 1993: An RUC officer was shot dead by an IRA sniper in Newry, Down. He was on checkpoint duty when a single shot fired by an IRA sniper hit him in the neck.

7th November 1993: A British soldier was shot and wounded by an IRA sniper in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

7th November 1993: An IRA unit attacked with machine-gun fire and mortars an RUC base in Caledon, County Tyrone. A nearby church and several houses were also damaged.

12th November 1993: An IRA unit attacked a British Army watchtower, the Borucki sangar, with an improvised flamethrower towed by a tractor in Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The device consisted of a manure spreader which doused the facility with fuel, ignited few seconds later by a small explosion. A nine meters-high fireball engulfed the tower. Four British soldiers inside were rescued by a Saxon armored vehicle.

21st November 1993: An IRA unit attacked with gunfire the house of a former UDR soldier in Cookstown, County Tyrone, but nobody was injured.

29th November 1993: The IRA carried out a gun and bomb attack on the home of an RUC officer in Armagh town.

30th November 1993: A massive IRA bomb was defused two-miles (3 km) outside Armagh town.

2nd December 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper while on foot-patrol in Keady, County Armagh. He was hit in the stomach by single bullet fired from a nearby hill.

3rd December 1993: A massive IRA bomb was defused in the Poleglass area of Belfast.

7th December 1993: An IRA unit mortared Newtownbutler RUC barracks in Fermanagh.

12th December 1993: Two RUC officers were shot dead by the IRA while travelling in their patrol car in Fivemiletown, County Tyrone. The patrol car was on Main Street when it was hit by at least 20 shots from both sides of the street. In a follow up operation a British Army helicopter was fired on by the IRA.

14th December 1993: An IRA bomb exploded on a railway track in Woking, Surrey, England, disrupting commuter services.

14th December 1993: Two soldiers were wounded by a bomb blast in Derry.

16th December 1993: Two further IRA bombs on the Surrey railway were defused.

19th December 1993: An IRA landmine attack on a British patrol in Derry left six civilians -three adults and two children- who were near the device requiring hospital treatment.

20th December 1993: A British soldier and a civilian were wounded in an IRA bomb attack in the Suffolk area of Belfast. A number of IRA fire-bombs exploded in stores and a post-office in London causing minor damage. Seven incendiary devices were made safe.

23rd December 1993: The IRA announced a three-day Christmas ceasefire.

27th December 1993: The IRA ceasefire ended with a mortar attack on Fintona RUC base, County Tyrone; a car-bomb attack on Springfield Road RUC base in Belfast; and a gun and bomb attack on a British Army base in Portadown, County Armagh.

28th December 1993: A British soldier was injured when the IRA fired a horizontal mortar at a foot-patrol in Belfast.

29th December 1993: An IRA unit fired a missile at a British patrol on Upper Library Street in Belfast. The IRA claimed that this was a new armour-piercing mortar projectile. A coffee-jar bomb was also thrown at a British patrol in Belfast.

30th December 1993: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA’s South Armagh Sniper while on foot-patrol in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

1994

1st January 1994: Eleven premises in and around Belfast were firebombed by the IRA including the Linen Hall Library.

6th January 1994: An IRA unit fired a grenade at a British patrol on the Springfield Road Belfast.

11th January 1994: Two British soldiers were injured by an IRA booby-trap outside their base in Crossmaglen, County Armagh, right after a mortar attack on the barracks there.

11th January 1994: Three RUC officers were injured when their patrol vehicle was hit by an IRA rocket in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

12th January 1994: A female British soldier was shot and wounded by an IRA sniper in the New Lodge area of Belfast. Troops returned fire. An RUC officer and a number of civilians suffered minor injuries when a bomb aimed at a British Army patrol demolished a nearby building used by the attacker 50 minutes later. A loaded rifle was recovered and two men arrested in the aftermath.

15th January 1994: Two stores in Belfast and one in Newtownards were damaged by IRA fire-bombs.

16th January 1994: Seven men were arrested after an IRA Barrack buster was discovered near Clogher, County Tyrone.

19th January 1994: Three stores in Coleraine and Limavady were damaged by IRA firebombs. Devices were also found in four other premises.

22nd January 1994: A British Army Land Rover was hit by an IRA rocket while on patrol in Poleglass west Belfast.

23rd January 1994: Two civilian were injured by a bomb intended for security forces at the town of Dungannon, County Tyrone.

24th January 1994: An RUC officer escaped injury after an IRA unit opened fire at him in County Fermanagh.

27th January 1994: IRA bombs exploded in three stores in Oxford Street, London.

28th January 1994: An IRA fire-bomb exploded in Oxford Street, London, and another was discovered.

30th January 1994: An IRA rocket was fired at a British Army post in the New Lodge area of Belfast.

3rd February 1994: An IRA unit planted a bomb outside the home of an RUC assistant Chief Constable in Derry.

6th February 1994: Three British soldiers were injured when an IRA horizontal mortar hit their patrol vehicle in Poleglass, west Belfast.

16th February 1994: Four British soldiers were wounded by an IRA roadside bomb, one of them seriously, while on patrol at Short Strand, east Belfast. An RUC officer was also injured.

17th February 1994: An RUC officer was killed and two others seriously injured when the IRA fired a homemade rocket at an RUC patrol vehicle on Friendly Street in the Markets area of Belfast.

18th February 1994: An IRA incendiary device was defused in a record shop at Charing Cross in London.

19th February 1994: A number of incendiary devices were left in shops in London, including Burton stores in Regent Street and New Oxford Street. One device destroyed a newsagents shop, three caused minor damage, and several others were made safe.

20th February 1994: An IRA unit fired a rocket at a British patrol car in Poleglass.

21st February 1994: An IRA mortar attack destroyed an RUC base and caused widespread damage in Beragh, County Tyrone.

22nd February 1994: An incendiary device was made safe in a hardware store in London.

2nd March 1994: The IRA carried out a horizontal mortar attack on a British patrol in west Belfast.

8th March 1994: Four Mark-6 mortar shells were fired from a car towards Heathrow Airport near London. The shells landed on or near the northern runway, but failed to explode.

10th March 1994: The IRA launched a second attack on Heathrow Airport, firing four mortar shells over the perimeter fence which landed near Terminal Four but failed to explode.

10th March 1994: An RUC officer was shot dead by the IRA in Dunmore Greyhound Stadium in Belfast. The Police Officer was in the lounge when he was shot in the head by an IRA volunteer and shot again as he lay on the ground. A second IRA volunteer fired into the ceiling to cover their escape.

13th March 1994: The IRA defied tightened security to launch a third attack on Heathrow Airport, firing five mortar shells over the perimeter fence which landed near Terminal Four but failed to explode. Later that night both Heathrow and Gatwick airports were closed for two hours after coded telephoned bomb threats were received.

13th March 1994: An IRA arms cache was discovered at a college in Belfast. A grenade, a rifle, a pistol, a homemade bomb, a number of detonators, 2 lb of explosive and over 1,500 rounds of ammunition were captured.

20th March 1994: A shell from a Mark-10 mortar hit a British Army Lynx helicopter attempting to land at a base in Crossmaglen. An RUC officer had to be pulled out of the blazing helicopter before it exploded inside the base.

31st March 1994: Portadown RUC base came under attack from an IRA unit using rockets and automatic weapons.

1st April 1994: An RUC officer was killed when the IRA fired a horizontal mortar at a British Army patrol in the Waterside area of Derry City. Several other RUC officers were injured.

5th April 1994: The IRA began a three-day ceasefire in an attempt to show it was serious about bringing about an end to the conflict.

8th April 1994: The three-day IRA ceasefire ended at midnight.

9th April 1994: An IRA unit attacked two checkpoints near Newtownbutler, Fermanagh with automatic weapons. One of the attacks on an outpost manned by the British Army lasted five minutes. A British patrol in Stewardstown, Belfast, came under IRA rocket attack. A border checkpoint was mortared by an IRA unit at Aughnacloy, County Tyrone.

15th April 1994: An RUC patrol came under IRA rocket attack in Armagh town.

20th April 1994: An IRA unit launched a horizontal mortar bomb at an RUC patrol on Spencer Road, Derry. An RUC officer was killed.

24th April 1994: The IRA shot dead two men as they sat in a car in Garvagh, County Londonderry. One was a former British soldier and the IRA claimed that the other was a UDA member.

25th April 1994: A British soldier was hurt when a mortar hit Crossmaglen British Army base, County Armagh.

25th April 1994:Sixteen alleged drug-dealers were shot in the knees by the IRA across Belfast City.

26th April 1994: An alleged drug dealer, Francis Rice, was shot dead by the IRA in the Suffolk area of Belfast. He was shot 5 times in the head and his body was dumped on a grass verge by the roadside. Earlier in the day a three man IRA unit burst into his home and he escaped by jumping out a first story window.

28th April 1994: A former UDR soldier was shot dead by the IRA at his home on Salters Grange Road near Armagh town. He was also a member of the Orange Order.

1st May 1994: Two more alleged drug dealers were shot in the knees by the IRA.

6th May 1994: An IRA unit fired a rocket at a British Army patrol in the Lenadoon area of Belfast. A woman who was standing nearby was wounded by shrapnel.

11th May 1994: An IRA unit launched an attack against a British observation post in west Belfast.

12th May 1994: The homes of two RUC officers were bombed by the IRA. An IRA unit also launched a mortar at an RUC base in Newry and a rocket was fired at a British patrol in Poleglass, Belfast.

13th May 1994: A civilian employed by the RUC was killed by the IRA after a booby trap bomb exploded beneath his car as he traveled through Lurgan.

14th May 1994: A British soldier was killed when the IRA detonated a bomb next to a British Army permanent vehicle checkpoint in Keady. Another soldier was injured.

21st May 1994: A British soldier from Cookstown, County Tyrone, was kidnapped by the IRA and later found shot dead in a field near Mullaghcreevie housing estate in Armagh town.

21st May 1994: IRA volunteer Martin Doherty was shot dead by the UVF in Dublin while attempting to stop the bombing of a pub. His actions are believed to have save the lives of many people.

23rd May 1994: The IRA shot dead a man in central Belfast. The man had been training with the British Army but had been discharged on medical grounds.

23rd May 1994: The IRA bombed Fort George British Army base in Derry, injuring one soldier.

27th May 1994: An IRA unit raked a British Army checkpoint with gunfire from a van at Aughnacloy, County Tyrone, then crossed the border into the Republic.

30th May 1994: An IRA unit mortared a British Army base in Tempo, County Fermanagh.

4th June 1994: A leading loyalist paramilitary was injured in an IRA bomb attack in Portadown.

10th June 1994: Three British soldiers were wounded when an IRA unit mortared a military checkpoint in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

13th June 1994: An IRA bomb exploded at a railroad station in Hertfordshire, England.

17th June 1994: The IRA launched a horizontal mortar at an RUC patrol in west Belfast, but missed their target.

21st June 1994: An IRA unit fired a rocket at an RUC patrol in west Belfast.

23rd June 1994: Two civilians were injured when an IRA bomb exploded in a farmhouse at Cabra, near Dungannon, County Tyrone.

26th June 1994: The IRA mortared Pomeroy RUC base, County Tyrone.

26th June 1994: An IRA unit fired an horizontal mortar at a British Army Land Rover in West Belfast.

2nd July 1994: Three IRA Mk-15 mortar rounds hit the Royal Irish Regiment barracks at Malone Road, Belfast. A number of people attending a wedding in a nearby church were treated from shock.

4th July 1994: Seven people were injured when an IRA mortar overshot its target (a British Army patrol) and landed in the carpark of a church in south Belfast.

8th July 1994: Two British soldiers were injured when their patrol vehicle was hit by an IRA rocket in the Suffolk area of Belfast.

10th July 1994: The IRA launched a gun attack on the home of DUP politician Willie McCrea, in Magherafelt, County Londonderry.

11th July 1994: A member of the Ulster Democratic Party, Ray Smallwoods, was shot dead by the IRA in Lisburn. A five member IRA unit consisting of four men and one woman took over a nearby house the night before and as he left his home the next morning one IRA volunteer ran down the streets and blasted him several times with a shotgun. Smallwoods was a leading member of the UDA and was responsible for shooting and injuring Bernadette McAliskey.

12th July 1994: A two-ton IRA lorry bomb was discovered in Heysham in England.

12th July 1994: A RAF Puma helicopter was hit by an IRA mortar over Newtownhamilton and forced to crash land on a soccer field.

15th July 1994: Two constables, an arrested Sinn Féin councillor and an elderly woman motorist were wounded in an IRA gun attack on an RUC vehicle in Killeshil, near Dungannon, County Tyrone.

17th July 1994: A civilian from Belfast was shot dead by the IRA and her body dumped on the Fermanagh border. The IRA claimed she was an informer.

20th July 1994: An RUC officer was injured in Cookstown, County Tyrone, when an IRA bomb struck an RUC vehicle.

21st July 1994: An IRA suitcase-bomb was discovered at Reading Railway Station.

24th July 1994: There was an IRA landmine attack on an RUC patrol in Castlewellan, Down.

25th July 1994: A British soldier was shot and wounded by the IRA in Crossmaglen, County Armagh.

29th July 1994: More than 40 people were injured when the IRA fired three mortar bombs into Newry RUC base.

31st July 1994: Two UDA members, including high-ranking member Joe Bratty, were shot dead by the IRA on the Ormeau Road in Belfast.[271] The pair were ambushed by two IRA gunmen armed with AK-47 assault rifles. Up to 50 shots were fired and Bratty was hit at least 18 times. As the UDA men lay wounded on the ground one of the IRA volunteers leaned over them shooting at close range. As the IRA unit made their escape in a getaway car they were pursued by the RUC, shots were exchanged before the IRA car was brought to a halt but the gunmen escaped on foot.

3rd August 1994: Three British soldiers were injured when the IRA mortared Newtownhamilton British Army base.

6th August 1994: An RUC officer and a civilian were hurt by an IRA grenade attack at a court-house in Belfast.

8th August 1994: An off-duty British soldier was shot dead by the IRA in Crossgar, County Down. The soldier was shot twice in the side of the head by a lone IRA gunman. He was the last British soldier to be killed before the IRA’s 1994 ceasefire.

13th August 1994: An explosive device left in a bicycle detonated in a shopping centre in Bognor Regis, West Sussex damaging 15 shops but causing no injuries. A similar device found on Brighton Pier was made safe using a controlled explosion.

17th August 1994: The IRA bombed two loyalist pubs in Belfast: the Grove Tavern and the Berlin Arms. There were no injuries.

18th August 1994: An IRA firebomb exploded in a bar on the Ormeau Road, Belfast.

18th August 1994: Notorious Dublin criminal and alleged heroin trafficker Martin Cahill (AKA The General) was shot dead by the IRA outside his home in Rathmines. Cahill was shot four times at close range with a .357 Magnum through the window of his car. The IRA had claimed he was closely associated with the UVF and had aided them in the attack on the Widow Scallans pub in Dublin which killed IRA volunteer Martin Doherty.

21st August 1994: The IRA mortared a British Army base in Rosslea, County Fermanagh.

21st August 1994: An IRA bomb destroyed the empty car of a British soldier in Maghera, County Londonderry.

22nd August 1994: A high explosive device was defused outside a Laura Ashley shop in Regent Street, London.

26th August 1994: An IRA mortar bomb missed the RUC base at Donemana, County Tyrone.

27th August 1994: An IRA mortar bomb fired from a farm trailer exploded 200 yards short of Cloghoge checkpoint, County Armagh.

28th August 1994: An IRA mortar bomb exploded prematurely in its launch tube at a car-park in Downpatrick, County Down.

29th August 1994: The IRA fired a rocket at the RUC base in Toome, County Antrim.

30th August 1994: The IRA carried out a bomb attack on an RUC base at Springfield Road, Belfast.

30th August 1994: The IRA launched a mortar bomb at Fort Whiterock British Army base at Springfield Road, Belfast.

31st August 1994: The IRA declared the first of two ceasefires in the 1990s.

6th September 1994: Six IRA volunteers attempted to escape from Whitemoor Jail in Cambridgeshire, England.

22nd September 1994: A Derry man sustained a broken leg in an IRA punishment beating.

10th November 1994: A Post Office worker was shot dead when IRA members raided a Royal Mail sorting office in Newry. The IRA admitted they had carried out the attack but claimed it was not sanctioned by the Army Council and that the ceasefire still stood.

1995

29th April 1995: A drug dealer suspected of importing ecstasy tablets into Northern Ireland was shot a number of times and killed by two gunmen while drinking in a bar in central Belfast. The IRA did not claim responsibility but security forces stated that they were responsible. This killing was the first planned assassination by the IRA since the 1994 ceasefire.

5th September 1995: A suspected drug dealer was shot dead by the IRA as he sat in his car in the Andersonstown area of west Belfast. He had been named as a drug dealer on posters which had been put up around west Belfast.

( 2nd October 1995: WO2 Keith Theobold, Death by violent or unnatural causes. )

8th December 1995: An alleged drug-dealer was killed by an IRA unit. He shot seven times in the back and head in south Belfast. The victim had previously served time in prison for handling stolen goods.

18th December 1995: An ex-IRA volunteer was shot in the knees and then the chest by IRA volunteers in north Belfast. It was stated during the inquest that he was killed as a result of a personal vendetta by individuals from within the Republican Movement.

1996

2nd February 1996: The house of a part-time member of the RUC was riddled with gunfire in Moy, County Tyrone. A ‘senior security source’ claimed that the IRA was responsible, although the IRA later denied responsibility.

10th February 1996: The IRA ended its 1994 ceasefire with a massive lorry-bombing in East London adjacent to the South Quay DLR station in London Docklands. Despite warnings to evacuate the area two civilians were killed in the bombing. The initial estimate of the damage caused was £85m.

15tgh February 1996: A bomb placed in a phone booth on the Charing Cross Road in London is made safe using a controlled explosion.

18th February 1996: An improvised high explosive device detonated prematurely on a bus in Aldwych, in central London, killing Edward O’Brien, the IRA operative transporting the device and injuring 8 others.

9th March 1996: The IRA claimed responsibility for a small bomb which exploded on the Old Brompton Road in London, England.

31st March 1996: The IRA handed over £20,000 pounds of captured cannabis to a Priest in Newry who then handed it over to the RUC. The IRA said they had captured it from a drug-dealer.

7th April 1996: The IRA detonated a bomb in Earls Court, west London.

24th April 1996: Two small IRA bombs exploded underneath Hammersmith Bridge, London.

7th June 1996: Detective Garda Jerry McCabe was shot dead by the IRA during a botched post-office robbery in Adare, County Limerick.

15th June 1996: The IRA detonated a 3,000 lb (1,400 kg) bomb in Manchester, injuring over 200 people and causing damage valued at £411m. This was the largest IRA bomb ever detonated in Great Britain, and the largest bomb to explode in Great Britain since the Second World War.

28th June 1996: An IRA unit mortared a British Army base at Osnabrück in Germany. The attack caused widespread damage when a shell landed near the base’s fuel depot.

23rd September 1996: IRA volunteer Diarmuid O’Neill was shot dead by British police during a raid on his home in Hammersmith, London. O’Neill was unarmed and had his hands in the air when he was shot six-times by British police.

7th October 1996: The IRA detonated two car bombs at the British Army’s Northern Ireland HQ, Thiepval Barracks, killing a British soldier and injuring 21 soldiers and 11 civilian workers.( See Thiepval barracks bombing )

20th December 1996: An RUC officer was shot and injured in an IRA gun attack in a Belfast children’s hospital. The officer was protecting DUP Councillor Nigel Dodds.

1997

1st January 1997: Two bombs containing approximately 500 lb (230 kg) of explosive were defused at Belfast Castle. It is believed that the IRA were responsible.

5th January 1997: A 250 lb (110 kg) bomb was defused near Cullyhanna, County Armagh. The IRA is believed to have been responsible.

6th January 1997: An RUC officer was injured when an IRA rocket hit a security hut at the Royal Courts of Justice in Belfast.

11th January 1997: Tempo RUC base in County Fermanagh was mortared by the IRA. Two mortar shells landed inside the base, one crashing through the building’s roof, but both failed to detonate.

11th January 1997: A British Army post in Belfast was attacked by gunfire. The IRA is suspected.

13th January 1997: An IRA unit fired a horizontal mortar at a joint British Army/RUC patrol on Kennedy Way in Belfast. There were no injuries.

18th January 1997: An IRA unit fired two horizontal mortars at an armoured RUC patrol in Downpatrick, County Down. There were no injuries.

20th January 1997: An IRA unit hurled two explosive devices at a British armoured vehicle as it left Mount pottinger RUC barracks, County Antrim. There were no injuries.

27th January 1997: An IRA unit fired a rocket at an RUC Landrover in Toome, County Antrim.

28th January 1997: It is believed the IRA was responsible for firing two rockets at an RUC patrol on the Springfield Road, Belfast.

5th February 1997: An IRA unit fired a horizontal mortar at a British patrol on Newell Road in Dungannon, County Tyrone. There were no injuries.

7th February 1997: There was a gun attack on an unmarked van carrying British soldiers to Belfast airport. In Lurgan, a grenade was thrown at an RUC landrover and an IRA unit was spotted priming a mortar.

10th February 1997: A massive landmine was discovered on the A5 motorway between Strabane and Omagh. The IRA said it was intended for a British patrol but the presence of civilians in the area forced them to disarm the device.

10th February 1997: A horizontal mortar fired by an IRA unit hit an RUC armoured vehicle leaving a security base. The ambush took place outside the village of Pomeroy, County Tyrone. One RUC officer was injured.

12th February 1997: A British soldier was shot dead by the IRA South Armagh sniper near the British Army base in Bessbrook, County Armagh, Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick was the last British soldier to be killed in Northern Ireland during Operation Banner.

13th February 1997: An RUC patrol vehicle was hit by an IRA rocket in the Kilwikie estate in Lurgan, County Armagh. There were no injuries.

22nd February 1997: An IRA mortar unit was intercepted by the RUC in Caledon, County Tyrone, on its way to carry out an attack on a British security facility. A five-mile (8 km) chase followed before the IRA volunteers managed to escape on foot.

26th February 1997: A 16 year-old was beaten in an alleged IRA punishment attack in Armagh town.

2nd March 1997: A primed IRA mortar was discovered near Warrenpoint, County Down.

6th March 1997: The IRA detonated a large bomb on Glenalina Road in Belfast as a joint British Army/RUC patrol passed.

13th March 1997: A British soldier was injured by an IRA grenade in Ardoyne, Belfast. Several people was arrested in the aftermath.

13th March 1997: A British soldier and an RUC officer were injured in an IRA bomb attack in the Short Strand area of Belfast.

18th March 1997: The IRA launched a twin-tube mortar attack on an RUC mobile patrol at Downpatrick, County Down.

26th March 1997: The IRA carried out a double bomb attack on a mainline railway and signal box in Wilmslow, England. There was also a hoax bomb alert on the main Doncaster line. The attacks caused major and widespread railway and traffic disruption.

26th March 1997: A 1 kg home-made bomb was thrown by IRA volunteers to the Army/RUC base at Coalisland, County Tyrone. The device blew a hole in the perimeter fence. Undercover British soldiers shot and seriously injured 19 year-old Gareth Doris seconds later. The soldiers left the scene under the protection of the RUC after being cornered by a crowd and after firing shots in the air. Two women were wounded by plastic bullets fired by RUC officers. (See 1997 Coalisland attack)

29th March 1997: An RUC officer was badly wounded when he was shot by the South Armagh Sniper outside Forkill joint security base, County Armagh.

3rd April 1997: The discovery of two bombs on main motorways in England following coded warnings by the IRA resulted in widespread disruption.

6th April 1997: The British Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse was abandoned after the IRA warned that bombs had been planted in the area. No explosive devices were found.

9th April 1997: The IRA attacked two British border checkpoints near Rosslea, County Fermanagh. Both checkpoints were raked with automatic gunfire.

10th April 1996: Sixteen undercover SAS members restrained four IRA volunteers, part of one of the two sniper teams which operated in South Armagh and handed them over to the RUC, after tracking the IRA men to a farm complex. The owner of the farm was also arrested.

10th April 1997: A female RUC officer was shot and badly wounded by an IRA sniper in Derry City.

14th April 1997: A civilian went into hiding after he was badly beaten in an IRA punishment attack in Derry.

18th April 1997: A series of bombs and bomb alerts brought Britain’s transport system to a halt and effectively cut all the main routes connecting England to Scotland. Bomb alerts closed large sections of the M6 motorway. A bomb exploded closing Leeds railway station while another bomb explosion at a rail bridge in Doncaster halted both rail and motorway traffic.

21st April 1997: IRA bomb hoaxes almost entirely closed down Londons transport links. King’s Cross, St. Pancras, Charing Cross, Paddington, Baker Street and all three railway stations at Watford junction were evacuated due to bomb alerts. Soon after alerts closed Gatwick, Stansted and parts of Heathrow airports. By 9:00 am, at the height of the rush hour, London was ‘gridlocked’ with a ten-mile (16 km) jam on the M25.

25th April 1997: Two bombs planted by the IRA blew up next to M6 motorway in central England. A 132,000 volt electricity pylon was damaged.

29th April 1997: Britain’s transport industry claimed minimum losses of £30 million after a series of IRA bomb alerts in southern England brought traffic to a standstill.

31st May 1997: A massive IRA landmine was discovered in Poleglass. The IRA said the device was intended for a British patrol but that the attack had to be abandoned due to the proximity of civilians to the ambush site. The firing mechanism was disabled and a warning phoned in.

5th June 1997: The IRA carried out a gun attack on a British Army unit in Derry.

16th June 1997: Two RUC officers were shot dead in an IRA ambush while on foot patrol in Lurgan, County Armagh. Both officers were shot at point blank range in the back of the head.

26th June 1997: An IRA unit fired a rocket propelled grenade at a British armoured patrol in north Belfast. The rocket bounced off the vehicle and exploded in an empty building.

5th July 1997: An IRA volunteer shot at an RUC armoured vehicle besides the local RUC base in Coalisland, County Tyrone, seriously wounding an RUC female officer.

6th July 1997: The IRA carried out a number of blast-bomb and gun attacks on the RUC across Belfast City in the course of fierce riots which erupted in nationalist areas after the Orange Order was allowed to march on Drumcree. See 1997 nationalist riots in Northern Ireland.

6th July 1997: An IRA unit forced to withdraw a number of riot squads who were trying to move into the Markets area of Belfast.

6th July 1997: A military base in West Belfast came under gun and grenade attack from an IRA unit. A Protestant teenager was shot in the shoulder. Another Army base at the end of Lenadoon Avenue suffered a similar attack.

7th July 1997: Two IRA volunteers exchanged fire with an RUC patrol at a checkpoint in English Street, Armagh town. The checkpoint was attacked with petrol bombs in the aftermath.

7th July 1997: A train near Lurgan, County Armagh, was boarded by seven IRA masked men and set on fire, destroying five carriages.

8th July 1997: There was a gun battle between loyalist and IRA volunteers in Ardoyne, Belfast. The IRA claim that two loyalist were wounded.

8th July 1997: IRA gunmen beat off an attempt by British soldiers and RUC officers to regain control of the streets around a Catholic housing in North Belfast where rioters had erected barricades.

8th July 1997: A landmine was planted by the IRA near Dungannon, County Tyrone, where there was a bomb alert.

9th July 1997: Another train was burned by the IRA in Newry station, County Down.

9th July 1997: IRA gunmen hijacked and burned a number of vehicles at Dungannon, County Tyrone.

11th July 1997: Three British soldiers and two RUC officers were injured when the IRA launched a gun and bomb attack on their checkpoint in North Belfast. The IRA unit fired 56 shots from two AK-47 assault rifles and also threw a coffee-jar bomb.

12th July 1997: A Mark-15 mortar bomb was fired at Newtownhamilton British Army barracks, southern County Armagh. The shell exploded just outside the perimeter fence.

13th July 1997: The IRA claimed responsibility for shooting two men in the knees in Newry. They claimed the men were criminals who had been responsible for assaulting two members of Sinn Féin as well as stealing from local businesses.

19th July 1997: The IRA declared a second ceasefire. They state that: “We have ordered the unequivocal restoration of the ceasefire of August 1994. All IRA units have been instructed accordingly”.

12th September 1997: Four unarmed IRA volunteers stopped a member of the Continuity IRA in Ardoyne and confiscated his gun from him.

In October 1997: The Continuity IRA accused the IRA of destroying one of their bombs south of the border before it could be transported north.

In October 1997: An IRA volunteer assaulted and injured a Continuity IRA volunteer as he attempted to place a bomb in a bank in Derry City.

10th December 1997: Liam Averill, an IRA volunteer, escaped from the Maze Prison by dressing up as a woman and boarding a coach which was transporting prisoners families.

1998

9th February 1998: Convicted drug-dealer Brendan Campbell was shot dead by the IRA on Lisburn Road, Belfast.

10th February 1998: The IRA was believed to be responsible for killing UDA member Bobby Dougan in retaliation for the killings of Catholics. Sinn Féin was temporarily excluded from peace talks as a result.

19th July 1998: Andrew Kearney, a civilian from the New Lodge in Belfast was shot in the legs outside his girlfriends house and died of his injuries. His family have claimed he was killed by the IRA after he assaulted a leading IRA volunteer from north Belfast.

8th October 1998: The USA removed the Provisional IRA from its list of foreign terrorist organizations.

21st November 1998: An alleged drug dealer was shot dead by the IRA in Dublin.

Sourced from Wikipedia

Jamie Balfour the High Sheriff of Hampshire

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Mar 012015
 

During the period of 2014-15

Jamie Balfour

President of the RGJRA

Was the High Sheriff of Hampshire.

What is a High Sheriff and their duties;

The Office of High Sheriff is an independent non-political Royal appointment for a single year. The origins of the Office date back to Saxon times, when the ‘Shire Reeve’ was responsible to the king for the maintenance of law and order within the shire, or county, and for the collection and return of taxes due to the Crown. Today, there are 55 High Sheriffs serving throughout the counties of England and Wales each year.

Whilst the duties of the role have evolved over time, supporting the Crown and the judiciary remain central elements of the role today. In addition, High Sheriffs actively lend support and encouragement to crime prevention agencies, the emergency services and to the voluntary sector. In recent years High Sheriffs in many parts of England and Wales have been particularly active in encouraging crime reduction initiatives, especially amongst young people. Many High Sheriffs also assist Community Foundations and local charities working with vulnerable and other people both in endorsing and helping to raise the profile of their valuable work. The High Sheriff Association adopted DebtCred and Crimebeat in recent years in response to specific areas of need.

High Sheriffs receive no remuneration and no part of the expense of a High Sheriff’s year falls on the public purse.

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The Young Jamie with 9 Platoon 1973

Jamie Balfour is the Director General of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust (WCMT) www.wcmt.org.uk based in London. Established in 1965 It is Sir Winston’s national memorial and living legacy, and sends British citizens from all walks of live to travel overseas, to bring back knowledge and best practice for the benefit of others in their UK professions and communities. Its current main area of activities focuses on Arts for Older People (Creative Ageing), Communities that Work, Prison and Penal Reform, Education, and Patient Care, and from 2015 will include Early Age Intervention.

Jamie also runs a mixed beef and arable farm in Hampshire, which is in the HLS environmental scheme, including SSSI water meadows and a Roman Road ! He is a Deputy Lieutenant for Hampshire and has been Chairman of the ABF The Soldiers Charity in Hampshire since 2008. He has also been Chairman of Youth Clubs Hampshire and Isle of Wight (now 4Youth), and the Game and Wildlife Conservancy Trust in Hampshire, a member of the Country Landowners Association Hampshire Committee and a Governor of Durley C of E Primary School.

He was born in Hampshire and joined the Army aged 19 in 1970, serving for 37 years in the Royal Green Jackets (now The RIFLES ) whose regimental headquarters is in Winchester, before retiring in 2007. Much of his Army career was spent on operations in Northern Ireland, in Bosnia, and with the UN in Cyprus and Kosovo, and he did four tours in the Ministry of Defence in London. He has also served in Berlin, Germany, Gibraltar, The Falkland Islands, India and Rwanda. For three years he was the Director of Infantry, the functional head for the 27,000 infantrymen then in the Army, and his last appointment was a President of the “Baha Musa” Iraq court martial, the first to have a High Court judge sitting as the Judge Advocate. He remains President of the Royal Green Jackets Regimental Association.

He is married to Carolyn with three grown up children, and lives in Durley

High Sheriff 2014-15: Focus and Interests

During my year as High Sheriff of Hampshire I have one clear priority which is to Support the Judicial System. The judicial system is going through a period of major change affecting the courts, the court service, lawyers, the Probation Service, magistrates and others. Appointed by the Queen to uphold all matters relating to the judiciary in Hampshire, I feel that as High Sheriff I must understand the issues, be seen to be supportive of all those involved, and help where I can.

In particular I would hope during my time as High Sheriff to:

Visit every legal court in Hampshire, and to meet as many of the supporting staff as possible.
Continue the work of Rupert Younger my predecessor, in supporting measures to reduce reoffending rates. I hope I will be assisted in this by an understanding of Prison and Penal Reform issues through my work with the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust (WCMT) (www.wcmt.org.uk) and our partnership with the Prison Reform Trust.
Work with Hampshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner and Chief Constable, to support the work of the police and Crimestoppers.
Underpinning this will be the continuation of the High Sheriff Community Awards to give special recognition to deserving individuals in the community who bring benefit to others in the communities in which they are based. The focus of the awards will be on individuals and groups working on law and order related projects, with a particular emphasis on those that enhance safety and cohesion in our communities. From 2014 these awards will be supported by the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Community Foundation (HIWCF), and further information on the awards will be found later this year on this and the HIWCF website www.hantscf.org.uk.

If time permits for personal interests, I would also like to support:

The use of the arts by local authorities and care homes to ensure creative ageing for older people, another area of interest of the WCMT.
Projects that assist the rehabilitation and resettlement of ex-servicemen and women, especially those with mental health issues.
Discussions over the move to increased agricultural environmental measures as part of the CAP Reform process, and the related issues of maintaining food production levels, increased UK consumption of home produced quality food and maintaining value for the producer.

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9 Platoon being led by Jamie at the Double 1973

Jamie giving an interview during his army days

South Armagh Sniper (1990–1997)

The South Armagh Sniper is the generic name given to the members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army’s (IRA) South Armagh Brigade who conducted a sniping campaign against British security forces from 1990 to 1997. The campaign is notable for the snipers’ use of .50 BMG calibre Barrett M82 and M90 long-range rifles in some of the shootings.

Origins

One of the first leaders of the Provisional IRA, Seán Mac Stíofáin, supported the use of snipers in his book Memories of a Revolutionary, attracted by the motto “one shot, one kill”. The majority of soldiers shot dead in 1972 (the bloodiest year of the conflict in Northern Ireland) fell victim to IRA snipers.

About 180 British soldiers, Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and Her Majesty’s Prison Service prison staff members were killed in this way from 1971 to 1991.

The AR-18 Armalite rifle became the weapon of choice for IRA members at this time.

The British Army assessment of the conflict asserted that the IRA sniping skills often did not match those expected from a well trained sniper. The report identifies four different patterns of small arms attacks during the IRA campaign, the last being that developed by the South Armagh sniper units.

Sniper teams in South Armagh

The rifles
During the 1980s, the IRA relied mostly on weaponry smuggled from Libya. The regular shipments from the United States, once the main source of arms for the republicans through the gunrunning operations of George Harrison, were disrupted after he was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1981. The smuggling scheme suffered a further blow when the Fenit-based trawler Marita Ann, with a huge arms cache from Boston, was captured by the Irish Naval Service in 1985.

However, between the mid-1980s and the 1990s there was some small-scale activity, leading to the purchase of US-made Barrett M82 and M90 rifles, which became common weapons for the South Armagh snipers. According to letters seized by US federal authorities from a Dundalk IRA member, Martin Quigley, who had travelled to USA to study computing at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, the organisation managed to smuggle an M82 to the Republic of Ireland just before his arrest in 1989. He was part of a bigger plot to import electronic devices to defeat British Army countermeasures against IRA remote-controlled bombs.

In August 1986, another M82 had been sent in pieces from Chicago to Dublin, where the rifle was re-assembled. At least two of the M90 rifles were bought as recently as six months after the first IRA ceasefire. It was part of a batch of two sold to Michael Suárez, a Cuban resident of Cleveland on the 27th of January 1995 by a firearms dealer; Suárez later passed the weapons to an Irishman, who finally shipped the rifles, their ammunition and two telescopic sights to the Republic of Ireland. An unidentified leading figure inside the IRA sniper campaign, quoted by Toby Harnden, said that:

What’s special about the Barrett is the huge kinetic energy… The bullet can just walk through a flak jacket. South Armagh was the prime place to use such weapon because of the availability of Brits. They came to dread it and that was part of its effectiveness.

Three of the security forces members killed in this campaign were instead the victims of 7.62×51 mm rounds. Five missed shots belonged to the same kind of weapon. Harnden recalls a Belgian FN FAL rifle recovered by the Gardaí near Inniskeen in 1998 as the possible source of these bullets.

Shootings

Contrary to the first British army assessment, or the speculations of the press, there was not just a single sniper involved. According to Harnden, there were two different teams, one responsible for the east part of South Armagh, around Dromintee, the other for the west, in the area surrounding Cullyhanna. The volunteer in charge of the Cullyhanna unit was Frank “One Shot” McCabe, a senior IRA member from Crossmaglen. Each team comprised at least four members, not counting those in charge of support activities, such as scouting for targets and driving vehicles. Military officials claim that the Dromintee-based squad deployed up to 20 volunteers in some of the sniping missions. The teams made good use of dead ground to conceal themselves from British observation posts.

Between 1990 and 1997, 24 shots were fired at British forces. The first eight operations (1990–1992), ended in misses. On the 16th of March 1990, the Barret M82 was used for first time by the IRA. The target was a checkpoint manned by soldiers of the Light Infantry regiment on Сastleblaney Road. A single .50 round pierced the helmet and skimmed the skull of Lance Corporal Hartsthorne, who survived with minor head injuries. In August 1992, one team mortally wounded a Light Infantry soldier. By April 1997 seven soldiers and two policemen had been killed. An RUC constable almost lost one of his legs in what became the last sniper attack during the Troubles.

Another six rounds achieved nothing, albeit two of them near-missed the patrol boat HMS Cygnet, in Carlingford Lough and another holed Borucki sangar, a British Army outpost at Crossmaglen square. On the 31st of July 1993 at 10:00 pm a British Army patrol which had set a mobile checkpoint on Newry Road, near Newtownhamilton, was fired at by an IRA sniper team. The British soldiers returned fire, but there were no injuries on either side. The marksman usually fired from a distance of less than 300 metres, despite the 1 km effective range of the rifles. Sixteen operations were carried out from the rear of a vehicle, with the sniper protected by an armour plate in case the patrols returned fire. At least in one incident, after the killing of a soldier in Forkhill on the 17th of March 1993, the British Army fired back at the sniper’s vehicle without effect. The IRA vehicles were escorted by scout cars, to alert about the presence of security checkpoints ahead.

Two different sources include in the campaign two incidents which happened outside South Armagh; one in Belcoo, County Fermanagh, where a constable was killed, the other in West Belfast, in June 1993. An RUC investigation following the latter shooting led to the discovery of one Barrett M82, hidden in a derelict house. It was later determined that this rifle was the weapon responsible for the first killing in South Armagh in 1992. Another Barrett is reported to have been in possession of the IRA team in the Occupation of Cullaville in South Armagh in April 1993.

A third unrelated sniper attack, which resulted in the death of a British soldier, was carried out by the IRA at New Lodge, North Belfast, on the 3rd of August 1992. Two other soldiers were wounded by snipers at New Lodge in November 1993 and January 1994. Two people were arrested and a loaded rifle recovered in the aftermath of the latter incident. On the 30th of December 1993 Guardsman Daniel Blinco became the last soldier killed by snipers in South Armagh before the first IRA ceasefire in 1994.

His killing, along with the reaction of the MP of his constituency, was covered by the BBC´s Inside Ulster, which also showed Blinco’s abandoned helmet and the hole made by the sniper’s bullet on the wall of a pub. The tabloid press of that time started calling the sniper ‘Goldfinger’ or ‘Terminator’, the nicknames current in Crossmaglen’s bars. The last serviceman killed by snipers at South Armagh, Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick, was also the last British soldier to die during the Troubles, on the 12th of February 1997. Restorick’s killing resulted in a public outcry; Gerry Adams called his death “tragic” and wrote a letter of condolence to his mother.

British personnel killed

Private Paul Turner on the 28th of August 1992 in Crossmaglen with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Constable Jonathan Reid on the 25th of February 1993 in Crossmaglen with a 7.62mm Rifle calibre.

Lance Corporal Lawrence Dickson on the 17th of March 1993 in Forkhill with a 7.62 mm Rifle calibre.

Private John Randall on the 26th of June 1993 in Newtownhamilton with a 7.62 mm Rifle Calibre.

Lance Corporal Kevin Pullin on the 17th of July 1993 in Crossmaglen with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Reserve Constable Brian Woods on the 2nd of November 1993 in Newry with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Lance Bombardier Paul Garret on the 2nd of December in 1993 in Keady with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Guardsman Daniel Blinco on the 30th of December 1993 in Crossmaglen with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick on the 12th of February 1997 in Bessbrook with a .50 Rifle calibre.

Caraher team captured

The IRA’s ceasefire from the 31st of August 1994 gave an opportunity to the British to collect intelligence from the local community to be used against the snipers. The truce was strongly resented by South Armagh IRA members. Even when the ceasefire was ongoing, an alleged member of the Drumintee squad, Kevin Donegan, was arrested by an RUC patrol in relation to the 1994 murder of a postal worker in the course of an armed robbery.

When the IRA ended the ceasefire with the bombing of the London Docklands in February 1996, some volunteers had already abandoned the organisation, while others had turned to criminal activities. The period after the ceasefire saw little IRA activity in South Armagh.

Following two successful attacks in 1997, on the 10th of April a Special Air Service unit captured four men from the sniper team based in the west of the region, responsible for several deaths. After a brief fist fight, James McArdle, Michael Caraher, Bernard McGinn and Martin Minnes were seized at a farm near Freeduff and handed over to the RUC. The British troops were under strict orders to avoid IRA casualties. A Barrett M90 rifle was seized, which forensic and intelligence reports linked only to the 1997 shootings. It was hinted that there was an informer, a suggestion dismissed by the Ombudsman report.

McGinn provided the RUC with a lot of information about IRA activities, and even betrayed Frank McCabe, the IRA commander behind the sniper campaign, but he eventually withdrew his statement. According to Toby Harnden, one of the key players in the British campaign against the South Armagh sniper was Welsh Guards’ Captain Rupert Thorneloe, who worked as an intelligence liaison officer between the 3rd Infantry Brigade and the RUC Special Branch. Thorneloe, who reached the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, was killed in July 2009 by an improvised explosive device, during the war in Afghanistan. Another senior figure involved in the British efforts against the sniper squads was SAS Staff Sergeant Gaz Hunter, whose experience in South Armagh dates back to 1975. Despite the sense of relief among British forces after the arrests, there was concern over the other two Barrett rifles still in possession of the South Armagh Brigade.

One of the IRA volunteers captured, Michael Caraher, was the brother of Fergal Caraher, a Sinn Féin member and IRA volunteer killed by Royal Marines at a checkpoint on 30 December 1990 near Cullyhanna. Michael, also shot and wounded in the same attack, had lost a lung in the aftermath. Despite some witnesses claiming that the shooting was unprovoked, the Marines involved were acquitted by Lord Chief Justice Hutton. The shooting of Guardsman Daniel Blinco in Crossmaglen took place on the second anniversary of the killing of Fergal Caraher. Michael Caraher was thought to be the shooter in several attacks, but he was only indicted for the case of the maimed constable. He was defended by solicitor Rosemary Nelson, later killed by the loyalist organisation Red Hand Defenders. The other three men of the sniper team were convicted in 1999 for six killings, two of them unrelated to the sniping operations (the deaths of two men when one of the team’s members, James McArdle, planted the bomb at Canary Wharf in 1996). While the capture of the sniper unit was the single major success for the security forces in South Armagh in more than a decade, the big picture showed that by then the IRA and Sinn Féin had achieved huge political gains towards their long-term goals. The men were set free 18 months later under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement. The Dromintee sniper party was never caught.

Conclusions

The IRA sniping activities further restricted the freedom of movement of the British Army in South Armagh by hindering their patrols. The MoD issued a new type of body armour, which was both expensive (£4,000) and too heavy (32 lbs) for use on patrol. The morale of the troops was so low that some servicemen had to be disciplined for remaining in shelter while under orders to check vehicles. A British major said that:

That meant that to some extent the IRA had succeeded in forcing troops off the ground and it made helicopters more vulnerable so we had to guard against using them too much.

The IRA strategy also diverted a large amount of British security resources from routine operations to tackle the threat. Until the 1994 ceasefire, even the SAS was unable to prevent the attacks. The IRA ceasefire between 1994 and 1996 made surveillance easier for the RUC and the British Army, leading to the success against the Caraher team. The security forces set the ground for an SAS ambush by deploying a decoy patrol, but this counter-sniper operation failed twice. At the end, the sniper squad was tracked to a farm complex and arrested there.

By the second IRA ceasefire, another team was still operational, and two Barrett rifles remained unaccounted for. The campaign is viewed as the most efficient overall IRA operation in Northern Ireland for this period.

A Highway Code-style sign saying “SNIPER AT WORK” was mounted by the IRA near Crossmaglen and became an icon of the republican cause.

Write up sourced from

http://hampshirehighsheriff.org.uk/past-high-sheriffs/

You Tube / UKTV History

Wikipedia

Pictures from Philip Pickford collection

“IM A GREEN JACKET DAD”

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Feb 282015
 

I AM A GREEN JACKET AND PROUD!

To join a man that fights for pride
To know he’s a Green Jacket
The man by your side

To know that man won’t let you down
To understand it’s not all for the crown
To know he’s a family member
To know he won’t ever surrender

Yet we have to bow out
Without a shout
See our regiment take another clout

Its name may disappear
But in my heart
It will always be here

To watch our Regiment leave this town
To see our cap badge change
Still to this day I see rage

Is that so bad

“IM A GREEN JACKET DAD”

By Philip Mason

Dipprasad Pun

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Feb 062015
 

Dipprasad Pun

Royal Gurkha Rifles 17th Sept 2010 Afghanistan

article-1393355-0C5C3E3C00000578-454_468x667Dipprasad Pun CGC (Nepali: दिपप्रसाद पुन) is a Nepalese corporal of the Royal Gurkha Rifles who was decorated with the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross for an act of bravery during the War in Afghanistan on the night of the 17th of September 2010. Pun, then an Acting Sergeant, single-handedly defeated 12 – 30 Taliban insurgents who were storming his control post near Babaji in Helmand province.

Immediately prior to the engagement, Pun, who was with the 1st Battalion Royal Gurkha Rifles, was on sentry duty at a checkpoint guarding his unit’s compound. Taliban fighters, planting bombs near the compound gate under the cover of darkness, suddenly surrounded and attacked his post with AK-47s and RPGs. Corporal Pun, alone and believing he was about to die, decided to kill as many of the enemy as possible. During the engagement he reportedly spent all his ammunition, more than 400 rounds; used 17 hand grenades and a Claymore mine before battering the last fighter with the tripod of his machine gun. Two Taliban were still attacking his post when he set off the Claymore mine.

Upon receiving the award, Corporal Pun said that he had no choice but to fight; the reason being that the Taliban had surrounded his checkpoint, and that he was alone. During the engagement, Pun saved the lives of three of his comrades and prevented his post from being overrun. His actions are cited as “the bravest seen in his battalion during two hard tours”.

Pun originally hails from Bima in western Nepal, and lives with his wife Shobha in Ashford. His grandfather, father and brother all served with the Gurkhas.

Dipprasad Pun

article-1393355-0C5C3F8600000578-802_468x632Pictures from the Daily Mail

The Gurkha Museum is in the former Peninsula Barracks, Winchester

Sourced from Wikipeia