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Northern Ireland: Just incompetence or police collusion in
Omagh bombing?
By Mike Ingram
21 December 2001
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The publication of an official report into the police investigation
of the 1998 Omagh bomb, which killed 29 people, has provoked a
flurry of criticism from the media, politicians and the police.
The report, by Police Ombudsman, Nuala OLoan, focuses
on the fact that the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) had repeatedly
been tipped off that an attack was in preparation, the first time
some 11 days prior to the bombing. The 12-page document states,
It will never be known whether or not the bombing of Omagh
could have been prevented if the RUC had taken more action in
relation to the information it received during the period between
4 and 15 August 1998.
When the Guardian newspaper began leaking the report
the week before it was officially published, Northern Ireland
Secretary John Reid condemned media speculation as
damaging. Reid said, There are many people within
the media who are suggesting that special branch or someone else
in the RUC could have prevented the Omagh bomb. They are not reading
the report I have read.
After the reports official release, the Chief Constable
of the Northern Ireland Police Serviceas the RUC is now
known following the implementation of police reforms that are
part of the Good Friday AgreementRonnie Flanagan called
a press conference to defend his forces actions. Flanagan
said, I do not consider the report as any sort of fair or
thorough or rigorous investigation. I consider at this stage what
has been presented to me is a report of an erroneous conclusion
reached in advance, then a desperate attempt to find anything
which might happen to fit in with that erroneous conclusion.
Flanagan said legal advice was being sought at both a personal
and organisational level.
Peter Mandelson, who was Northern Ireland Secretary for much
of the time the RUC was investigating the Omagh bombing, rushed
to defend Flanagan. Both in an article in the Times and
a subsequent radio interview, Mandelson praised the integrity
and courage of Flanagan and described the OLoan report
as a very poor piece of work indeed. Mandelson said,
the ombudsman is making the most extreme conclusions about
the Chief Constable... she is accusing him of defective leadership,
poor judgment and a lack of urgency.
The significance of the Omagh bombing
Not only was the Omagh bombing the worst terrorist atrocity
in nearly thirty years of the Troubles in Northern
Ireland, it marked a watershed in the efforts of the British,
Irish and US governments to ensure popular approval of the
Good Friday Agreement signed in April 1998. This established the
Northern Ireland Assembly and an Executive based on power-sharing
between the pro-British Protestant parties and the Irish nationalist
and predominantly catholic parties, including Sinn Fein.
The bombing provided a text-book example of the anti-working
class perspective pursued by the IRA in Ireland. The Real IRA,
a tiny breakaway from Sinn Fein/IRA, and which opposed the Good
Friday Agreement, planted the bomb in an attempt to re-ignite
sectarian hostilities between Catholics and Protestants, and so
derail the new arrangements.
The bomb served an entirely opposed purpose, however. It horrified
ordinary working people and allowed the imperialist powers to
present themselves as the guardians of peace. Omagh was used to
reinforce the claim that the only alternative to the Northern
Ireland Agreement was a resumption of sectarian violence.
The bombing was also used to justify the introduction of anti-democratic
measures that have severely curtailed political freedoms, in the
name of combating terrorism.
From very early on, therefore, speculation arose over the possibility
of British and RUC involvement in the bombing. In August this
year, a former British double agent calling himself Kevin Fulton
made allegations that he had informed the RUC over 48 hours in
advance that the Real IRA was going to plant a bomb in Omagh.
He alleged that the British and Irish security forces had allowed
the bomb to be taken in a stolen car from the nearby town of Dundalk
to its final destination in Omagh, because if they had tried to
prevent this it could have compromised and possibly exposed agents
within the Real IRA.
The ombudsmans report
OLoan does not directly accuse the RUC of a cover-up,
and gives no indication that she believes information was not
acted upon for any other reason than incompetence and a failure
of leadership.
Nevertheless, the ombudsman was required to investigate the
claims made by Fulton and note other significant facts. Her report
not only confirms Fultons factual account of events, but
also points to an earlier warning that Omagh would be bombed:
Eleven days before the bombing the RUC received an anonymous
telephone call warning there would be an unspecified
terrorist attack on police in Omagh on 15 August 1998.
According to the report, the caller named two people (identified
only as C and D). He provided an address of one of the individuals,
and the area in which the other one lived. The informer said they
would bring AK47 rifles and a rocket launcher on a given
date to the Continuity Irish Republican Army. He gave a
nickname for a third individual (E) who was intending to bring
the weapons across the border into Northern Ireland, as well as
the address to which the weapons would be taken and the name of
a further individual (F) who resided at this address. The informer
then said the arms would be moved to an unknown address two or
three miles from Omagh. He stated that the weapons would be used
in an attack on police in Omagh on 15 August 1998. He then agreed
to call back the next day.
The 10-minute phone call was taken by an officer at Omagh Police
Station who immediately drove to Divisional Headquarters in Enniskillen.
There he met the Detective Chief Inspector who escorted him to
the Special Branch office where he told officers what he had told
by the caller.
The report also notes: Special Branch took only limited
action on the information received on 4 August 1998 and a threat
warning was not sent to the Sub-Divisional Commander of Omagh,
as required by a Force Order.
It further states, Special Branch personnel told the
Omagh Police Officer that C and D were
only smugglers. The Special Branch Officers had apparently
not left the room at any stage before making this assessment,
indicating that they knew the individuals concerned.
It has been established by the Police Ombudsmans
Investigators that D had been associated with Republican
terrorists in the year before the Omagh Bombing. This was evident
in Special Branch records at the date the anonymous call was received,
the report notes.
It then adds that from the same records, The Police Ombudsmans
Investigators discovered strong indications for a possible identity
of E who had significant subversive involvement with
Republican terrorist activity. While this individual may or may
not be E, the details established provide sufficient
grounds for more detailed enquiries to have been make rather than
the immediate rejection which occurred.
At the time of Fultons initial allegations, Flanagan
had described his claim that the RUC had prior knowledge of the
bombing as preposterous. But the Police Ombudsman
states: Three days before the bombing of Omagh the RUC also
received information from a reliable informant known
as Kevin Fulton which indicated that terrorists were about to
move something North over the next few days.
Between June 6, 1998 and August 12, 1998, Fulton had five meetings
with his police handler, a Criminal Investigation
Department (CID) officer. Between June 6 and 8, 1998, Fulton gave
information regarding A who lived in the Republic
of Ireland and was involved with the real IRA. Fulton said that
A had been seeking to obtain coffee grinders (sometimes
used in the making of bombs) the report says.
During a meeting on 12 August 1998, three days prior
to the Omagh Bomb, Fulton said the Real IRA was about to
move something North over the next few days. Fulton also
named another person, B, who was assisting A.
Shortly after the Omagh Bomb, Fulton telephoned his handler
to ensure that, in particular, the information he supplied on
12 August 1998 had been recorded, the report notes.
Remarkably, in point 9 it states:
Records for the meeting with Fulton on 12 August 1998,
three days before the Omagh Bomb, and for the meeting with him
on 23 July 1998 cannot be found within Special Branch.
The information was passed by the CID handler to the
Force Intelligence Bureau. The Force Intelligence Bureau passed
this information to Special Branch.
The CID handler, additionally, verbally briefed Special
Branch about this information but no records exist of this verbal
exchange. A Special Branch officer remembers he received calls
but cannot provide any details.
Special Branch states that they have never received these
HIGHLY SIGNIFICANT DOCUMENTS. [Emphasis in original]
The role of the Special Branch
The latter part of the report deals with the initial RUC investigation
into the bombing, and specifically the role of the Special Branch.
It cites a review of the RUC investigation conducted between March
24, 2000 and November 17, 2000, noting, Many evidential
opportunities had been missed in the initial RUC investigation
into Omagh.
The information provided between 4 and 15 August 1998
had not been made available to the Reviewing Team. The Reviewing
Officer discovered the existence of the anonymous telephone call
of 4 August 1998, in documentation held by the Omagh Bomb Investigation
Team on 14 July 2001... The Review Report states that, when found,
the anonymous information was marked as Intelligence does
not refer to Omagh. No lines of enquiry had been undertaken
by the Omagh Bomb Investigation Team relating to the information.
The Review Report recommended that this information should be
thoroughly researched with a view to assessing its possible implication
in the Omagh Bomb atrocity.
The review also states, when finally located by the Review
Team, the bomb car (the murder weapon) was deposited
in a car park with a tarpaulin over it and that it had rusted.
The Reviewing Officer identified delays of a whole year before
follow up actions were initiated on statements obtained, according
to the Police Ombudsman.
The Ombudsmans Report also reveals, The Senior
Investigation Officer was refused access to some Army and Special
Branch videos from South Armagh which hampered lines of enquiry.
It says that recommendations that the circumstances of the
handling of the 4 August anonymous intelligence be investigated
by a senior officer and the suspects investigated have not
been acted upon.
Within two days of the Omagh bombing, the Senior Investigating
Officer was provided with only limited intelligence on five suspects
by Special Branch. The five were quickly arrested, but eliminated
as suspects at an early stage. The Ombudsmans Report notes:
In the course of this investigation the Police Ombudsmans
Investigators discovered that Special Branch Officers decide what
intelligence Senior Investigators need to know to conduct their
investigations.
The report makes clear that in the case of the Omagh bomb,
Special Branch decided that the evidence required was minimal.
It identified 360 intelligence documents within Special
Branch which may have been of varying degrees of relevance to
the Omagh Bomb investigation. 78 percent of these intelligence
documents held by Special Branch have not been passed to the Omagh
Bomb Investigation Team.
The report adds that documents relating to 1998 were only a
sample of the intelligence examined and that a wider analysis
could identify more. Such an analysis was in large part
prevented by the refusal of the RUC to cooperate fully with the
investigation. The report states:
The Chief Constable welcomed the Police Ombudsmans
investigation and assured it full cooperation. During the course
of this investigation, it is of considerable concern that some
critical information was not provided in the initial disclosures
that were made to the Police Ombudsmans Investigators. At
senior management level the response to the enquiry has been defensive
and at times uncooperative.
The Police Ombudsmans Report says that Flanagan specifically
was reluctant to grant access to their material to Police
Ombudsmans Investigators and failed to inform those Investigators
of a computer system where intelligence, vital to the investigation,
was held.
A request for direct access to the intelligence system had
to be made on September 21 and Flanagan only agreed to the request
on October 9. Some four weeks had passed before investigators
finally gained access to the system on October 17.
The reports attempt to blame these repeated failures
to act on information simply to poor leadership in the RUC, is
hardly credible. The relatives of the Omagh victims have since
reiterated their demand for a full public inquiry, in an effort
to uncover the truth.
See Also:
Finucane murder suspect shot dead in Northern
Ireland
[15 December 2001]
The Omagh bombing
and the dead-end of nationalism
[18 August 1998]
Documents prove
British state organised murders in Northern Ireland
[10 April 1998]
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