Dublin:
British Army experts dismantled a dud car bomb outside a police base in the Northern Ireland border town of Newtownhamilton, the second such threat in the past two days.
Unlike Monday's car bomb outside the British spy headquarters in Northern Ireland, the Newtownhamilton device failed to detonate yesterday. An Irish Republican Army splinter group called the Real IRA claimed responsibility for the first bomb but has yet to confirm it planted the second.
Police evacuated more than 50 nearby homes after receiving telephone warnings about the abandoned car in Newtownhamilton. British engineers using a remote-controlled robot spent more than 12 hours slowly prising open the car doors and disconnecting the bomb's power source, timer and wiring from the main explosives, which were liquid and flammable.
The rising dissident IRA threat appears timed to undermine the latest progress in Northern Ireland's Catholic-Protestant government. On Monday, the coalition gained responsibility from Britain for law-and-order matters, a step that had taken years of negotiations. The governments of Britain, Ireland and the United States say the move should encourage the Catholic minority to support the police and inform on the IRA dissidents operating in their communities.
The IRA killed nearly 1,800 people in a failed 1970-1997 campaign to get Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom. Most IRA members disarmed and renounced violence in 2005, but splinter groups continue to mount attacks in hopes of upsetting political cooperation within Northern Ireland.
Unlike Monday's car bomb outside the British spy headquarters in Northern Ireland, the Newtownhamilton device failed to detonate yesterday. An Irish Republican Army splinter group called the Real IRA claimed responsibility for the first bomb but has yet to confirm it planted the second.
Police evacuated more than 50 nearby homes after receiving telephone warnings about the abandoned car in Newtownhamilton. British engineers using a remote-controlled robot spent more than 12 hours slowly prising open the car doors and disconnecting the bomb's power source, timer and wiring from the main explosives, which were liquid and flammable.
The rising dissident IRA threat appears timed to undermine the latest progress in Northern Ireland's Catholic-Protestant government. On Monday, the coalition gained responsibility from Britain for law-and-order matters, a step that had taken years of negotiations. The governments of Britain, Ireland and the United States say the move should encourage the Catholic minority to support the police and inform on the IRA dissidents operating in their communities.
The IRA killed nearly 1,800 people in a failed 1970-1997 campaign to get Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom. Most IRA members disarmed and renounced violence in 2005, but splinter groups continue to mount attacks in hopes of upsetting political cooperation within Northern Ireland.
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