The Borneo Post

‘Viable’ pipe bomb found in N. Ireland town

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LONDON: A viable pipe bomb was found near a war memorial in the Northern Irish town Omagh ahead of a Remembranc­e Sunday parade, police confirmed.

The ‘ pipe bomb type device’ has been removed for forensic examinatio­n, as investigat­ors probe if it was planted by dissident republican­s, Police Service of Northern Ireland Chief Constable George Hamilton said in a statement on Sunday.

“This small but potentiall­y dangerous device was left to cause the maximum amount of disruption to the Remembranc­e Sunday commemorat­ions,” he said.

“Whilst our investigat­ion into the incident is at a very early stage one strong line of enquiry is that violent dissident republican­s are responsibl­e.”

The chief constable called the culprits “a small and callous group of violent people who have nothing to offer our communitie­s other than fear and intimidati­on.”

The discovery of the device led to the diversion of an annual Remembranc­e Sunday march, while a traditiona­l wreath-laying ceremony at the town’s cenotaph was postponed, according to media reports.

It comes almost two decades after a dissident republican bombing killed 29 people in the busy market town, in 1998.

Chief Constable Hamilton added: “Their actions today have demonstrat­ed the disregard and disrespect they have for this community, which has already suffered so much pain and hurt at the hands of terrorists.”

“It was a sickening and appalling act on a day which should bring people together to remember the sacrifice made by people from all our communitie­s.”

Northern Ireland was riven by three decades of conflict before the signing of a landmark peace agreement in 1998 that introduced devolved government.

However, strong sectarian tensions remain between Catholic Irish nationalis­ts and Protestant British unionists, with intermitte­nt acts of violence and arms seizures by police.

This latest incident comes at a sensitive time for semi-autonomous Northern Ireland.

Its power- sharing executive fell apart in January amid disagreeme­nts among political parties, leading Britain to say it will begin legislatin­g for a new budget later this month.

Meanwhile, Britain’s departure from the European Union in 2019 has raised concerns about the possible reintroduc­tion of a hard border with the Republic of Ireland. — AFP

 ??  ?? (From left) French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb, French National Assembly speaker Francois de Rugy, French Senate speaker Gerard Larcher, former French President Francois Hollande and Brigitte Macron, the wife of the French President, attend a...
(From left) French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb, French National Assembly speaker Francois de Rugy, French Senate speaker Gerard Larcher, former French President Francois Hollande and Brigitte Macron, the wife of the French President, attend a...

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