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| Thursday, 6 December, 2001, 22:31 GMT RUC 'knew about' Omagh attack plan ![]() Omagh devastation followed misleading bomb warnings A major investigation has revealed that the RUC had information about a planned attack in Omagh 11 days before the 1998 bombing which left 29 dead. The findings are contained in a draft report by the Police Ombudsman in Northern Ireland. It found that RUC Special Branch had been warned about a planned attack on 15 August - the day of the atrocity - but that information was not passed to police officers on the ground. The damaging report says that had the information been passed on and security checkpoints been put in place, the bombers may have been deterred. The Police Service of Northern Ireland has criticised the draft report as containing "factual errors" and rejected the claims of the informant quoted.
The Omagh bombing - later admitted by the dissident republican Real IRA - was the worst single incident in the 30 years of the Troubles. The ombudsman's report is now with the chief constable and Northern Ireland Secretary. The Ombudsman, Nuala O'Loan, began to examine police intelligence on the Omagh attack after an informant claimed in two newspapers that he had passed on information about a bomb being made by republican dissidents. But he did not mention Omagh. One of those papers - the Sunday People - claimed that no action had been taken because the bomb maker, named as Kevin Fulton, was also a police agent. The ombudsman's investigators discovered there had been another warning to the police.
On 4 August, a detective constable in Omagh had spoken to an anonymous caller for over 10 minutes and had been told of a planned attack in the town on 15 August. He passed that information to special branch, but they did not alert officers on the ground. The ombudsman's draft report is understood to be scathing in its criticism of how this information was handled, both before and after the bombing. The report, however, does not go as far as saying the bombing could have been prevented. It is understood to make serious criticisms of how intelligence information was handled by the police. It says: 'Significant' The report says information about the 4 August warning was found in a special branch file marked: "Intelligence does not refer to Omagh". The ombudsman describes this as a "significant error" and as "inexplicable and inexcusable". It should have formed "significant lines of enquiry" for the murder investigation team. The 4 August warning received in Omagh came at a time of growing dissident IRA activity. Security assessments had pointed to co-operation between the various dissident groups. Banbridge bomb Just three days before that warning, 35 people had been injured in a car bombing in Banbridge, County Down, again on a Saturday. The ombudsman's investigators are aware that the anonymous warning received on 4 August referred to the Continuity IRA and not the Real IRA which left the Omagh bomb. It has also emerged that within two months of the Omagh attack, the size of the murder investigation team had been reduced by 40%, and that the most senior officer working full-time on the inquiry was at the rank of sergeant.
In response to the allegations, the police said the report "contains so many significant factual inaccuracies, unwarranted assumptions, misunderstandings and material omissions that a request has been made to the ombudsman's office for a reasonable period of time to respond in detail with what we see as the serious deficiencies in this report." A statement added the service "absolutely rejects that either information provided by an agent code named Fulton or an anonymous call on 4 August 1998 could have led to the prevention of the atrocity". It said its "primary consideration was the feelings of the bereaved families and victims of the Omagh atrocity". Northern Ireland Secretary John Reid said: "Whether or not there are lessons to be learnt in this case, nothing should ever distract our attention from the suffering caused to the victims and their families by the evil people who planted the bomb in Omagh." |
See also: 06 Dec 01 | N Ireland 06 Dec 01 | N Ireland 06 Dec 01 | N Ireland 06 Dec 01 | N Ireland 05 Dec 01 | N Ireland 15 Aug 00 | N Ireland 16 Aug 99 | UK 17 Aug 98 | N Ireland 16 Aug 98 | Latest News 17 Aug 98 | N Ireland Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top N Ireland stories now: Links to more N Ireland stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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