New IRA vows to bomb Irish police in their homes

The group confirmed planting a car bomb that exploded outside a Belfast police station

The New IRA is one of a small number of active militant groups opposed to the 1998 peace deal. File picture: REUTERS/ (Clodagh Kilcoyne)

The New IRA said it would target the homes of police officers with bombs after confirming it planted a car bomb that exploded outside a police station in Belfast on Saturday, the Irish News quoted the nationalist militant group as saying on Tuesday.

No one was injured in the blast that occurred after a delivery vehicle was hijacked and the driver forced to take it to the police station.

It was the latest sporadic attempt by militant groups to target police officers, almost 30 years after a peace deal largely ended sectarian violence in the region.

The New IRA is one of a small number of active militant groups opposed to the 1998 peace deal. It has been behind many of the attacks on police, including a similar attempted car bombing at a police station outside Belfast last month.

The targeting of police officers at their homes would be an escalation of those attacks. The last officer to be killed in Northern Ireland, Const Ronan Kerr, died when a bomb exploded under his car outside his home 15 years ago.

The dissident group rejects the political compromises at the heart of the Good Friday Agreement that Northern Ireland will remain part of the UK unless a majority of the region votes by referendum to unite with Ireland.

The organisation said in a statement — which the Irish News said it received and which included a codeword to confirm its veracity — that it had intended to kill police coming out of the station after the driver was told to shout that there was a bomb in the car as they left.

“It is our intention, if they keep harassing the republican people, to bomb them [police officers] in their own houses, with no warning,” the statement added.

The New IRA, a far smaller organisation than the Irish Republican Army (IRA), which disarmed after the peace accord, typically claims responsibility for any attacks in coded statements to local newspapers.

Reuters


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