Saturday, 7 September 2013

**Currie Primary School - A litany of attacks on school children

UTV LIVE MONDAY 17/09/01 17:14:52
Protestant school children attacked

Protestant school children and their parents were attacked with
stones, bolts and golf balls as they left a primary school in north
Belfast this afternoon.

The P1 to P3 pupils were being picked up from Currie Primary on the
Limestone Road when the incident occurred. No-one was injured.
The children were about to go home from school around a 1.45 pm when
parents say a group of around 20 youths from the Upper Limestone Road
ran down and began throwing golf balls bolts and stones.
Paul Beattie, a parent at the school said: "This has been ongoing now
from the start of term up until now its just been abuse shouted in the
mornings at lunch and school leaving but this has been the first
serious incident where stones nuts and bolts thrown at the children.
"The children couldn`t get out of the school until 2.05pm when Miss
Thompson was assured that the area was safe for them to come out but
the parents had to go in and bring them out and if their parents
weren`t here the teachers had to go in and walk them down the street."
Local MP Nigel Dodds, of the DUP said: "I think it`s very sinister
indeed and to be deplored when you`re getting things like these bolts
fired I think its scandalous.
"I would call on community leaders who have any influence over the
Nationalists who are doing this to get them to stop because the human
rights of these children and parents are equally deserving to be
protected as other children we have seen highlighted."
------------------------
19th March - UTV
Approximately 70 Protestant children were locked in school for their
own safety after a republican mob attacked teachers, parents and
pupils at the Currie Primary School in north Belfast. The school is
located in an area which has seen an upsurge in anti-Protestant
rioting of late. Local councillor Nelson McCausland claimed the
trouble was sparked yesterday, when what he described as "republican
stormtroopers" verbally abused staff and children going to the school.
It is believed the recent upsurge in republican violence could be
related to the on-going US investigation of IRA/SF links with
Colombian narco-terrorists FARC. With media attention centred on the
trio of Sinn Fein/IRA terrorists charged with training FARC
guerrillas, Sinn Fein is keen to alleviate some of the pressure.
Source (UTV) 19-03a.doc (BBC) 19-03b.doc (EW)
------------------------
www.NewsLetter.co.uk
26th March

Parents in fear after attack at school
Protestant schoolchildren and their parents came under attack from
paint bombs and bricks on Monday when trouble flared outside their
school.
Parents and pupils from Currie Primary School on the Limestone Road,
north Belfast, were attacked with bottles, bricks and paint bombs.
Parents said the children are regular targets for sectarian abuse from
residents from the Newington and Parkside areas.
Nicola Wallace, who has children in Primary 3 and 7, said she fears
for her children's safety.
"It's getting out of hand. Every day there is an incident and the
children are frightened. Pupils who were supposed to go swimming
couldn't as they couldn't leave the building.
"At lunch time, there was a group of youths with their faces covered
standing with baseball bats.
"Also, there is often a group of men who stand outside the shops and
shout sectarian abuse as we take the children to and from school."
Community worker Eddie McClean said the problems at Currie Primary
School started "long before" the well-publicised incidents at Holy
Cross primary school in nearby Ardoyne.
"These children are traumatised. They are being attacked on a regular
basis," he said.
The DUP's Ian Crozier and Nigel Dodds blamed republican factions for
the attacks.
Mr Dodds said: "It is clear from the events that republicans are not
interested in ending the cycle of violence in north Belfast.
"In fact, they are attempting to plunge the area back into the
position it was in a few months ago, by igniting a Holy Cross-style
dispute around Currie Primary School.
"On a daily basis, children and parents at Currie primary are faced
with a gauntlet of violence and intimidation from republicans, who on
numerous occasions have actually attacked people going to and from the
school."
Mr Crozier, who also serves as a governor at the school, said police
would have to take a tougher line.
* On Monday night, Mr Dodds and the headmistress of Currie Primary
School called for immediate extra security in the area.
------------------------

UTV
TUESDAY 19/03/02 18:09:52
Clashes outside Belfast school

Rival factions have clashed outside a primary school at a north
Belfast flashpoint, police have said.
The trouble began when a nationalist mob gathered other outside
Currie Primary School on the Limestone Road, which was the scene of
riots last night.
Democratic Unionist Nelson McCausland claimed the trouble was sparked
yesterday, when what he described as "republican stormtroopers"
verbally abused staff and children going to the school.
------------------------

BBC
Wednesday, 20 March, 2002, 07:50 GMT
Officer injured in street clashes
Police and military personnel have come under attack from rival
factions during disturbances in north Belfast.
Trouble broke out on the Limestone Road shortly after 2100 GMT on
Tuesday when police attempted to separate rival nationalist and
loyalist groups.
Officers were then attacked by both sides throwing bottles bricks and
fireworks.
At least one police officer suffered minor injuries.
A number of petrol and paint bombs were also thrown at police.
Earlier on Tuesday, 70 children were prevented from leaving Currie
Primary School for a time when opposing factions confronted each
other.
A police spokesman said the incident, which involved stone throwing,
led to a minor stand-off.

------
25th March 2002 - Newsletter & BBC
"Protestant schoolchildren and their parents came under attack from
paint bombs and bricks on Monday when trouble flared outside their
school. Parents and pupils from Currie Primary School on the Limestone
Road, north Belfast, were attacked with bottles, bricks and paint
bombs. Parents said the children are regular targets for sectarian
abuse from residents from the Newington and Parkside areas.
Nicola Wallace, who has children in Primary 3 and 7 (Aged 7 and 11),
said she fears for her children's safety. "It's getting out of hand.
Every day there is an incident and the children are frightened. Pupils
who were supposed to go swimming couldn't as they couldn't leave the
building. "At lunch time, there was a group of youths with their faces
covered standing with baseball bats. Also, there is often a group of
men who stand outside the shops and shout sectarian abuse as we take
the children to and from school."
Community worker Eddie McClean said the problems at Currie Primary
School started "long before" the well-publicised incidents at Holy
Cross primary school in nearby Ardoyne. "These children are
traumatised. They are being attacked on a regular basis," he said. The
DUP's Ian Crozier and Nigel Dodds blamed republican factions for the
attacks. Mr Dodds said: "It is clear from the events that republicans
are not interested in ending the cycle of violence in north Belfast.
In fact, they are attempting to plunge the area back into the position
it was in a few months ago, by igniting a Holy Cross-style dispute
around Currie Primary School. On a daily basis, children and parents
at Currie primary are faced with a gauntlet of violence and
intimidation from republicans, who on numerous occasions have actually
attacked people going to and from the school."
Mr Crozier, who also serves as a governor at the school, said police
would have to take a tougher line.
On Monday night, Mr Dodds and the headmistress of Currie Primary
School called for immediate extra security in the area."
Source (BNL) 25-02a.doc (BBC) 25-02b.doc (EW) (CW)
------------------------

BBC Tuesday, 26 March, 2002, 14:20 GMT
Minister in school security talks
The talks centred on Currie Primary School
Staff at a north Belfast primary school which has been attacked by
nationalists have told the security minister of their concerns.
Jane Kennedy went to the mainly Protestant Currie Primary School on
Tuesday to meet staff and some of the school's governors.
The minister heard concerns about recent disturbances in the area and
how pupil numbers are falling, as families move away.
The meeting followed calls by North Belfast Democratic Unionist MP
Nigel Dodds for increased security at the school which currently has 135 pupils.
However, the minister said she did not believe this alone would solve
the area's problems.
Speaking after the meeting, she said: "The physical security, in the
end, will not resolve the underlying community problems that we see
exhibited when we see the religious violence and hatred and bigotry
being portrayed between two communities."
She said both sides would "have to learn to live together if we're
going to have a future together".
She said she had been impressed "by the caring professionalism" shown
by staff.
"I would encourage all of those in the community who are engaged in
trying to bring to an end the all too frequent violence that we have
seen on the Limestone Road, to redouble those efforts," she said.
The school principal, Mrs Anne Thompson, said the minister's visit had
helped to boost morale at what she called "this very difficult time".
In recent days, the school has come under attack during clashes
between loyalist and nationalist residents in the area.
On Monday, parents collecting their children from the school said they
were attacked from nationalists.
There was sustained rioting in the area at the weekend.
School principal Barbara Thompson and Mr Dodds met senior police
officers at Antrim Road police station in Belfast on Monday evening to
discuss their concerns.

------------------------

16th April 2002 - BBC
There have been serious disturbances in the Limestone Road area of
north Belfast after nationalists attacked a Protestant woman on her
way to collect her young child from Currie Primary School. The school,
attended by Protestant schoolchildren has been the focal point of
anti-Protestant aggression for several years.
Source (BBC) 16-03a.doc

------------------------
www.NewsLetter.co.uk
Wednesday, May 8, 2002
10-year-old scarred for life after attack
A 10-year-old Tiger's Bay boy who was stoned by a nationalist youth at
the weekend will be scarred for life.
Stevie Sloan was crossing the Limestone Road with his older brother -
after visiting his granny - when he was injured.
The youngster, a pupil at Currie Primary School, was only discharged
from the Royal Hospital yesterday after undergoing an operation where
he received 13 stitches.
He said: ''My eye is sore most of the time, but it gets worse at
night. I am blind in my left eye anyway, the one that was hit, because
of an accident that happened four years ago.
''I had been visiting my granny in Mountcollier and was walking home
with my big brother Darren at 9.30pm.
''I had no idea there was going to be rioting. I never saw the stone
coming.''
The child's mother, Celia Sloan, said every time she looks at her
son's face she feels sick because she knows if he had been a few
seconds earlier he might have been hit with a blast bomb.
Mrs Sloan, who is nearly five months pregnant, said: ''I thought I was
going to go into labour on Sunday night because of the shock of seeing
Stevie like that.
''There was blood dripping from his eye everywhere. My wee son is not
a rioter, he was just an innocent passer-by.
''All the parents in the area are frightened because they know what
could happen.
"I always get my children in off the street at 9pm, but it might be
sooner from now on as trouble seems to start around teatime. I don't
think it has ever been as bad as this.
''I was never a bigot in my life - but after what has happened to my
son I feel very bitter. I think anybody would.''
Last night Tiger's Bay Community worker Eddie McClean appealed for
parents to make their children aware of the dangers in the area.
He said: ''All the children in the area are frightened because of the
rioting. It is not safe for them to play in their own areas.
''But what really angers loyalists is the fact that nationalists will
not accept responsibility for their actions.
''No matter that happens they blame it on the UDA. I think some
nationalists need to go back to school and learn a few more letters of
the alphabet.
''People around here are traumatised with what is happening on a
nightly basis. I have had more than 100 families rehoused in the area,
further back away from the interface, because they do not want to
leave the area.''
Mr McClean added that while the installation of proposed CCTV cameras
at interfaces may not stop violence, it could pinpoint the
perpetrators and instigators of the violence.
Sunday night saw some of the worst rioting in north Belfast, where two
young men were shot by a republican gunman.
Another young man who rushed to help one of the men who had been shot
had his arm broken.

Sunday, 1 September 2013

Provisional IRA behind mortar warning to PSNI

Sunday Independent 01 Sep 2013

Provisional IRA behind mortar warning to PSNI

Provisional IRA behind mortar warning to PSNI

Explosives were planted to scare off police and family who want justice for murdered son

THE Provisional IRA – and not a dissident republican group – was responsible for planting the two mortars near the Border in south Armagh last week, the Sunday Independent has learned.

The Provisionals, who were supposed to have disbanded and stopped involvement in criminal activity after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, are still firmly in control of south Armagh and are preventing policing in an area that's politically dominated by Sinn Fein.It is understood the devices were planted after a warning was issued to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) two weeks ago to stop disrupting the multi-million euro diesel smuggling rackets along the Border, which is controlled by the south Armagh IRA.
The warning to the PSNI to stay out of south Armagh is believed to be in anticipation of police raids arising from the murders of Detective GardaAdrian Donohoe and young south-Armagh man Paul Quinn, who was beaten to death in October 2007.
A south-Armagh man was arrested by gardai three weeks ago and questioned about the murder of Mr Quinn, who was beaten to death by a squad of 11 IRA men armed with steel rods.
Sinn Fein has been facing calls to get the IRA to admit the murder in the same way it admitted the murder of prison officer Brian Stack in March 1983 after his family asked Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams for an explanation.
Mr Adams accompanied Mr Stack's two sons, Austin and Oliver, in a blacked-out van to a meeting with an IRA figure near Dundalk at the start of August of this year.
Following this meeting, the family of Mr Quinn asked that Mr Adams also get the IRA to admit responsibility for the murder of their son.
The mortars planted by the IRA last week were placed near the Quinn family home in Cullyhanna. Gardai believe this was a warning not just to the Quinn family, but also to the PSNI to give up on their campaign for justice for Mr Quinn. In its warning, the IRA did not give an exact location for the mortars and the British Army and PSNI had to mount a major clearance operation that effectively sealed off the village for nearly a week.
ANALYSIS Page 15
The mortar incident also came after a Sinn Fein press officer was taped making allegations about the murder of Mr Quinn, 21, and Det Garda Donohoe, 42.
Gardai have established the identity of the family blamed by the Sinn Fein official for the murder of Det Garda Donohoe. But they have dismissed any involvement by the family in the murder.
Sinn Fein officially ended its boycott of policing in Northern Ireland in January 2007, but this has never been applied by the party or the IRA in south Armagh.
Gardai say the IRA continues to control the area and threatens and beats anyone who challenges their authority. Mr Quinn was beaten to death as an example to others, gardai say.
The investigation into the murder of Det Donohoe has been hampered because the PSNI has been unable to gain public support due to the fear of the IRA. Even though Det Donohoe's killers are not members of the IRA, people in the area are still afraid to be seen helping the PSNI.
Three members of the gang live in the Crossmaglen-Cullaville area. The 27-year-old who gardai believe fired the shot that killed Det Donohoe comes from just south of the Border in the Ravensdale area but fled to south Armagh after the murder.
He subsequently travelled abroad. Another who fled is understood to have returned and is being hidden.
Sunday Independent

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Dissidents find new cause in drug war

Dissidents find new cause in drug war

NORTHERN IRELAND: IRA DISSIDENTS FIND NEW CAUSE IN DRUG WAR

by The Irish Independent
Republican movement splinter groups are emerging as Ireland's new mafia and are fuelling the gangland feuds besetting Dublin

'They're Celtic supporters with guns,' says a senior republican. 'They don't know any rebel songs, only Celtic songs'
Since it began reporting on the activities of terrorist groups in Ireland in 2003, the Independent Monitoring Commission has tracked the activities of the self-styled 'dissident' terror groups such as the 'Real' IRA and the 'Continuity' IRA.
In all its reports in the last few years, the Commission has repeated that the 'dissidents' are heavily involved in crime, primarily tiger kidnapping, armed robbery, extortion and smuggling. In its 21st report, issued earlier this year, the Independent Monitoring Commission also said the 'Continuity' IRA was involved in "brothel keeping".
Gardai in Dublin now see these groups as centrally involved in organised crime, including the murders of ordinary criminals who have refused to pay their extortion demands or who have otherwise crossed them.
Sean Winters, the 42-year-old north Dublin drug dealer who was shot dead as he walked along Station Road in Portmarnock last Sunday night is, ostensibly, a victim of republican gunmen. There was no political motivation whatsoever in his murder by the 'Continuity' IRA. He was murdered as part of a turf war over the distribution and sale of drugs in north Dublin.
The dissidents have completed the journey by republicans in Ireland from self-sacrificing idealists to pure criminals, in the same way that the republican revolutionaries of mid-19th Century Italy moved from the ideals of Guiseppe Garibaldi to the entirely criminal mafioso.
The same journey in Ireland began in the dying days of the Provisional IRA. Its members, particularly the Dublin-based brigade, moved from vigilantism against drug dealers to accepting bribes from particular drug gangs and then to carrying out assassinations of rivals to their dealers. Within a decade of Sinn Fein and the IRA leading marches of Concerned Parents Against Drugs to the homes of heroin dealers, the same people were heavily involved in the drug industry while still trading under the name of the Provisional IRA.
The Provos shot dead Joseph Foran, 38, a notorious gangster and heroin dealer, in Finglas in February 2000, not because of his involvement in the drug trade but because he refused to pay their extortion demands. Two months later, they shot dead Thomas Byrne, 41, an innocent man from the north inner city who had stood up to one of the senior Dublin IRA men who was heavily involved in hijacking goods containers from Dublin Docks.
In July 2001, the Dublin IRA shot dead Seamus 'Shavo' Hogan, 40, in south Dublin, passing the murder off as part of its campaign to rid Dublin of career criminals and drug traffickers. Hogan was, in fact, shot because he refused to pay protection and was involved in disputes with another southside drug gang that was paying money to the IRA.
Joseph Cummins, 48, another career criminal, was shot dead in Tallaght in December 2001 because he too refused to pay up.
While the IRA was murdering to order in Dublin, the other republican terror group, the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), which had been the paramilitary wing of the Republican Socialist Party, went headlong into the drug trade and became involved in feuding with Dublin gangs which it sought to control. Over the last decade, the memberships of both organisations in Dublin, and to a considerable degree in Northern Ireland, have merged.
The major shift from token republicanism for the IRA and INLA came in 2005 when the IRA announced the end of its 'armed campaign' and then finally announced its disbandment in 2008.
In response to the disbandment, the dissidents began moving into the crime territory which the Provisional IRA had begun to inhabit. Former Provisional IRA criminals, left with no name to claim, began firstly associating with and then adopting the mantles of the 'Real' and 'Continuity' IRAs. The evolution from the time of the 1981 Maze hunger strikes, when IRA men were prepared to die for the 'cause', to pure criminality has been completed.
Bernard Dempsey, 53, a former senior Provisional IRA man in Dublin and leader of the Concerned Parents Against Drugs in the south inner city in the Eighties, is serving life imprisonment for the murder of innocent James Curran in the Green Lizard Pub in Francis Street in 2005. Dempsey shot his victim dead when Curran confronted Dempsey after he watched him accepting an envelope full of cash from a notorious south city drug gang.
Dempsey transferred his allegiances to the 'Real' IRA and is now serving his sentence in its wing of Portlaoise Prison. His main former Provisional IRA associates in south Dublin now term themselves 'Real' IRA also. They have close links with the drug syndicate that has grown around the gang headed by the expatriate criminal Freddie Thompson.
On the north side of the Liffey, the former Provisionals are also in league with the dissidents and with the drug gangs. The former IRA gang which assassinated another innocent Dubliner, Joseph Rafferty, 28, in April 2004, is involved in the northside feuding that has been running for the past four years since the imprisonment for life of Christy Griffin for the rape of his partner's young daughter. Former IRA and INLA members are also involved in the latest round of feuding which started with the murder of gang boss Eamon Dunne, shot dead at the Fassaugh House pub in Cabra in April.
Gardai believe he was murdered by members of his own gang who thought he was plotting to kill them. The gang has split and the resulting turf war has drawn in the dissidents. So far there have been two deaths and four people seriously injured.
One of the most remarkable changes to have taken place among the republicans is that the new generation are drug takers as well as dealers. Last month witnesses told gardai that the young gunman who opened fire, with a gun in each hand, on the Players Lounge pub in Fairview, seriously injuring the innocent doorman and two customers, was "high as a kite".
As is almost universal with drug gangs, the dissidents are prone to splitting and feuding. There are dissident elements on both sides in the current feud in north Dublin.
Gardai say that the names 'Continuity' and 'Real' are apparently interchangeable. The group involved in the assassination of Sean Winters last week is currently using the name 'Continuity', but five years ago it was terming itself'Real' and part of the group led by the founder of the Real IRA, Michael McKevitt.
Prisoners on the dissident wing in Portlaoise Prison regularly fall out with each other. Last year one of the prisoners who had been the 'officer commanding' on the Real IRA landing was apparently expelled amid accusations of cocaine dealing. The 'republicans' are believed to be the main source of drugs and mobile phones coming into the jail for ordinary prisoners.
The dissidents were also behind the campaign of arson and grenade attacks on head shops. They carried out the attacks, gardai believe, as part of their 'protection' duties for the drug dealers.
Outside Dublin, the same patterns have emerged. In Derry and the north west, they have been carrying out a campaign of shooting drug dealers who refuse to pay them protection. In Newry and the Border area, where some of the 'Real' IRA now term themselves 'Republican Action Against Drugs', local people say the young members are mainly heavy drug users. One 'Continuity' group with members in the Dundalk, Dublin and Limerick areas is heavily involved in prostitution and the trafficking of young women from eastern Europe where they have established links with cigarette gangs.
In Dublin last week, one Continuity group issued a statement disavowing those (former 'Real' IRA now terming themselves 'Continuity') members responsible for the murder of Sean Winters.
Senior Garda sources say it seems unlikely that the downward drift into criminality will be reversed. The exposure of the Provisional IRA's drift into crime in Dublin was one of the main reasons for the erosion of Sinn Fein's electoral base in traditional working-class areas. The dissidents do not have any public support and no political wing or electoral base on which to build a political movement. Without this, they have become criminal groups merging with ordinary criminal gangs and being drawn into their feuds.
Asked to characterise the new generation of so-called 'dissidents', one senior republican figure said: "They're Celtic supporters with guns. They don't know any rebel songs, only Celtic songs."

Saturday, 27 July 2013

Hatecrime: Dirmoid Kennedy & Kyle McCollum's home video "Kill All Huns"

Suicide bombers - SF/IRA style

Human Bombs: Sinn Fein/IRA's version of bravery.
Sinn Fein/IRA love to portray themselves as brave heroes but these facts show the true lack of courage and disregard for human life that they have.

A brief description of "Proxy/Human Bombs" IRA/SF style; A person is kidnapped, beaten and their family are held hostage, they are tied and bound into a vehicle which contains a bomb and forced to drive it to a destination decided by the SinnFein/IRA terrorist. If they can escape well and good if not they die with anyone else that happens to be about. 
Here are a few examples of Sinn Fein/IRAs Human Bombs.
24/10/1990 -
While his family was held hostage in their Londonderry home, Patrick
Gillespie, RC, 42, married, 3 children was forced to drive a car
loaded with a bomb into the Buncrana Road checkpoint in Coshquin. The
explosion killed Patsy as well as 5 young soldiers from the Kings
Regiment. Stephen Burrows 30, from Blackpool. He left behind a wife
and a 3 year old son. Stephen Beachem, 20, from Warrington, Cheshire
Vincent Scott, 21, from Walton, Liverpool David Sweeney, 19, from
Widnes, Cheshire Paul Worrall, 23, from Runcorn, Cheshire As the bomb
exploded, gunmen opened fire from the safe haven across the border.
Four years earlier Patsy had narrowly escaped death when he was forced
to drive another human bomb to a local Army base. RC Bishop of Derry,
Dr Edward Daly accused the IRA of "crossing a new threshold of evil"
17 civilians were injured in the attack.

24/10/90 -
68 year old James McEvoy escaped injured after being forced to drive a
bomb into a checkpoint at Killeen, outside Newry. Cyril Smith, 21, P,
from the Royal Irish Rangers, died in the explosion, 13 of his
colleagues were injured. He was from Carrickfergus. At the inquest
into the atrocity James McEvoy said he was awakened in the middle of
the night to see two figures standing over him wearing balaclavas.
They blindfolded him before taking him some distance. He was ordered
to drive a car towards the checkpoint and if he did not comply two of
his sons would be murdered. He was to tell the soldiers there was a
bomb and they had 40 minutes to get clear. In reality though, within
seconds of Mr. McEvoy abandoning the car, the bomb was detonated.
James McEvoy died 7 months later. A relative said he "never got over
what happened that night in October".

24/10/90 -
Another Proxy attempt on the same day at Lisanelly Army base, Omagh,
failed when the main bomb didn't explode. A man had been strapped to
the car seat and forced to drive the bomb in, while his wife and 7
year old child were held hostage.

22/11/90 -
At around 9:30pm, a number of armed and masked men took over a house
in Newtownbutler. A man was taken out while his elderly parents were
tied up in a toilet. He was driven to the IRA's safe haven of the
Irish Republic were they held him in a derelict house. From there he
was taken away in a Toyota pickup truck accompanied by two armed men.
He was made to drive the truck to Annaghmartin, Fermanagh checkpoint
and told that the truck carried a bomb on a 5 minute timer. At the
checkpoint he shouted a warning and there was a small explosion. The
bomb itself failed to go off. On examination, the bomb contained
3,500lb of homemade explosives, the biggest IRA bomb to date. Had it
exploded it would have caused enormous havoc, destruction and certain
death.

3/2/91 -
IRA force a man to drive a 500lb human bomb into a UDR base in
Magherafelt, Co. Londonderry by holding his wife hostage in another
car. The driver shouted a warning and escaped before the bomb
exploded. Part of the base and 50 surrounding houses were badly
damaged. 3 members of the man's company had already been murdered by
nationalists because the firm survived by buliding for the security
forces.

24/3/93 -
On the day before John Hume and Gerry Adams issued their first joint
statement, the IRA exploded a one ton bomb in Bishopsgate, London. The
bomb caused damage estimated at upwards of a billion pounds. On the
same day two taxi drivers were used as human bombs in nationalist
attempts to blow up London, it failed when the drivers managed to
abandon their taxi's and shout warnings.

---
**More than 50% of votes from the Roman Catholic electorate in Northern Ireland are for the IRA/SF.