The "Real IRA" has claimed responsibility for the March 7 attack in which two soldiers were shot dead and four others, including civilians, seriously injured at the British army's Massereene Barracks in Antrim, Northern Ireland. The assailants, who attacked as pizzas from a local business were being delivered, all escaped. Massereene Barracks is the Northern Ireland headquarters of the British army's engineering division. Since the Good Friday Agreement, the number of troops there has been reduced and the base is due to be closed next year.
The Real IRA was born out of a split in the mainstream Provisional IRA (PIRA) in October 1997, when the PIRA's "quartermaster-general" resigned over Sinn Fein's embrace of the peace process. The man who walked out was Michael McKevitt, now serving a prison term on terrorism-related charges in the Irish Republic. McKevitt is married to Bernadette Sands McKevitt, a sister of martyred hunger striker and Republican icon Bobby Sands.
Shortly after its formation, the Real IRA quickly took over from the older Continuity IRA as the leading home for dissidents. The Real IRA was responsible for the Omagh bombing (which killed 29 in 1998) as well as a string of other attacks, including bombings in London and Birmingham. According to the latest report from the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC), the body appointed by the British and Irish governments to report on the paramilitary activities, it continues efforts to "enhance its organisational capability." (RTÉ News [2], BBC News [3], March 8)
See our last posts on Ireland [4] and the UK [5].
If you support our work, please leave a tip [6] or answer the Exit Poll [7].