The Guardian (USA)

Loyalist paramilita­ries suspected as hoax device disrupts Irish minister’s Belfast speech

- Lisa O'Carroll in Belfast

The attempted attack on the Irish foreign minister, Simon Coveney, in Belfast was a hoax, possibly carried out by the loyalist paramilita­ry group, the UVF, the police have said.

It halted a peace and reconcilia­tion event in north Belfast, forcing Coveney to leave the stage and interrupti­ng a funeral in a church in the same grounds as the venue.

Mark McEwan, PSNI assistant chief constable, condemned the “disgracefu­l actions” of those who caused major disruption­s at the event attended by dignitarie­s, guests and media.

“At this early stage of the investigat­ion out assessment is that these crimes were carried out by loyalist paramilita­ry groups. We are keeping an open mind, but one of the primary lines of investigat­ion as the UVF,” he told reporters on Friday evening.

The attack took place between 9am and 10am when a van was hijacked in Sydney Street West off the Shankill Road, Belfast, he said. “The van driver was threatened by two gunmen and forced to drive his white Vauxhall van a short distance to another street and a device was then placed in the van.”

The victim was then forced to drive the van to Holy Cross chapel, near to where the minister was speaking.

A controlled explosion took place at lunchtime but McEwan confirmed the device in the van had been declared a hoax.

The SDLP MP Claire Hanna, who was at the event, said people were told a hijacked van, potentiall­y with a suspicious device on board, had been found in the area, raising concerns that loyalist paramilita­ries could have been involved. “The irony is lost on nobody that this was an event about reconcilia­tion, about common ground with a genuinely diverse audience of people,” she said.

The driver of the vehicle was in tears inside the venue after alerting security officials.

Coveney tweeted that he was “saddened & frustrated that someone has been attacked & victimised in this way and my thoughts are with him & his family”.

The incident comes days after the UK’s Northern Ireland secretary, Brandon Lewis, lowered the terrorism threat in the country from “severe” to “substantia­l” for the first time in 12 years.

Lewis tweeted: “I am aware of reports of an ongoing security alert in Belfast. I am being kept up to date and I am in regular contact with the PSNI [Police Service of Northern Ireland]. Solidarity with Simon Coveney and all those impacted.”

Coveney was speaking at the event organised by the John & Pat Hume Foundation when he abruptly ended his speech and was ushered from the room. The minister told the audience he had to leave and hoped to be back in a few minutes, but the centre was evacuated

Coveney had been on the podium for five minutes and just as he finished a sentence about “John and Pat’s vision of an unshakeabl­e commitment to principled and peaceful change” his security guard took to the stage to alert him. “I’m afraid I have to leave. I hope I will be back in a few minutes. I hope you understand that,” he said.

Tim Attwood, the foundation’s secretary, said the event was the organisati­on’s first in-person conference since the end of Covid restrictio­ns.

 ?? Foundation. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA ?? Simon Coveney was giving a speech at an event organised by the John and Pat Hume
Foundation. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Simon Coveney was giving a speech at an event organised by the John and Pat Hume
 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? The hijacked van in the car park next to the venue where Simon Coveney was speaking.
Photograph: Reuters The hijacked van in the car park next to the venue where Simon Coveney was speaking.

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