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Northern Ireland: Allegations of British collusion in Omagh
bombing
By Robert Stevens
4 September 2001
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Information has emerged that the Royal Ulster Constabulary
(RUC) may have been informed 48 hours prior to the event that
the Real IRA was to plant the bomb in the town of Omagh on August
15, 1998 that killed 29 people and injured more than 200. Accusations
have also been made that the bombing was the work of a British
double agent within the Real IRA.
A former British double agent calling himself Kevin Fulton
has made the allegations. Fulton was an ex-British army soldier,
who says he was recruited by the secret service to inform on the
activities of the IRA in the 1980s. He claims to have been an
informer up until the IRA cease-fire in 1996.
Fulton has made the allegation to a number of media sources,
including Channel Four news and the Guardian newspaper.
Fulton alleges that two days prior to the bombing, he met a
senior member of the Real IRAa breakaway grouping opposed
to Republican Sinn Fein signing the (April 10) Good Friday Agreement
setting up the power-sharing Northern Ireland Assemblyin
a pub in Dundalk. He states that the man told him, Theres
something big on, but didnt go into any more details.
He added that the Real IRA member was covered in dust and
smelling like fertiliser. He had definitely been making a bomb.
Following this conversation, Fulton said that he informed his
RUC handler within hours and that his handler had
subsequently confirmed that this information was put into
the system.
On August 17, Northern Ireland Police Ombudsman Nuala O
Loan announced that the new allegations would be investigated.
A portion of Fultons interview with Channel Four reads
as follows:
Q: You think that some of the people responsible for
the Omagh bomb were informing at the time?
Fulton: Yes, no doubt.
Q: And they couldnt be compromised?
Fulton: I dont think the Omagh bombers meant to
kill people. The thing is they did, shit happened.
Q: Were the RUC warned about the bomb?
Fulton: I wouldnt say they were warned; they would
have known that certain things would have happened, yes.
Q: And you know that for sure?
Fulton: Yes.
Fulton stated to the Guardian that he passed on the
name of the Real IRA member he suspected of making a bomb to the
RUC and also gave the suspects car registration number.
The crux of Fultons allegations is that the British and
Irish security forces allowed the bomb to travel in a stolen car
from the nearby town of Dundalk to its final destination in Omagh
because if it was prevented it could lead to the compromising
and possible exposure of agent(s) within the Real IRA.
Another ex-informer, Willy Carlin, said of the Fulton allegations,
I would believe that the officer put it in the system, and
it would have immediately been shared by the security services,
by MI5 and MI6. It would definitely been shared with the Chief
Constable, no doubt about it. And it would have been shared with
the Garda [the police in the Irish Republic]. And the question
is, if it was shared, what happened? And why didnt someone
turn up in Dundalk and watch this man for 48 hours?
RUC Chief Constable Sir Ronnie Flanagan described Fultons
allegations that it had any prior warning about the Omagh as preposterous.
The RUC claims to know who is personally responsible for the Omagh
bombing, but has said no action can be taken because of a lack
of evidence and the witnesses needed to secure a conviction.
The Fulton allegations come at a time when there is growing
frustration about the lack of progress in apprehending and convicting
the Omagh bombers. On August 16, the husband of one of the victims
of the bombing interrupted a RUC/Garda press conference appealing
for more information and said that a conspiracy was
underway to prevent the conviction of the bombers. Lawrence Rush
said to the meeting, My dear sir, this is a conspiracy.
This will come out like the Derry Thirteen [a reference to the
Bloody Sunday massacre by the British army in 1972]. This is a
conspiracy by the British government and by everyone involved
in the administration. This is an example of administrative terrorism
Why did Sinn Fein close their office the day before the
bomb? Why was the army confined to barracks? Why sir, did the
RUC have only three men on the streets of Omagh and 24 men in
surrounding areas? Tell me that.
Fulton states that he also given the Police Ombudsman a copy
of a taped conversation between himself and his RUC handler earlier
this year. On the tape Fulton is heard to ask if he can recall
the 48-hour warning he gave to him before the Omagh bombing. The
man Fulton claims to be his handler is heard to reply, I
vaguely remember, but Id have to check my notes ... I remember
something ... I do remember bits and pieces.
Fultons solicitor, Imran Khan, has said of the allegations,
He is saying that he gave a warning to the RUC prior to
the Omagh bomb. He is not saying that he knew the Omagh bomb was
going to go off, but that information wasnt passed on, which
could have given the RUC a head start.
Fultons allegations are backed up by the remarks of another
former British double agent, who uses the name Michael Clark.
Clark stated on August 18, It makes perfect sense for the
army or the intelligence services to allow the progress and delivery
of a device of some nature to preserve and protect the safety
of an agent. I believe that is possibly the case.
Other reports have emerged that the same man responsible for
the Omagh bombing may have also been involved in the making and
planting of two other bombs detonated around the same time. On
August 1, 1998 a bomb went off in Bambridge, County Down injuring
35 people. The bomb was estimated to be of a similar size to that
of the Omagh bomb and the individual who reported the bomb to
the security services used the same code word.
Clark states that he personally informed the British Ministry
of Defence that there was a danger that the identity of the bomb
maker could be exposed. He said, We were worried that if
there was a possibility that he is an agent, his life has been
placed at risk.... I took appropriate action and informed the
MoD of the relevant details and passed on the information to the
senior officer in army intelligence.
It is not beyond question that a British agent within the Real
IRA could have planted the Omagh bomb. Earlier this year more
details emerged about the covert activities of the Force Research
Unit (FRU), an undercover security operation financed and run
by the British state in Northern Ireland for more than two decades.
The FRU was a terror networkinvolving up to 100 soldiers
and double agentsthat organised a series of covert intelligence
and military operations and authorised their agents to carry out
numerous illegal activities including bomb making, murder, and
the shooting of RUC officers. The FRUs chain of command
reached into the upper echelons of the British state. Fulton himself
claims that he became an IRA member on FRU instructions, and took
part in a series of terrorist bombings in the 1980s and the early
1990s. These included the 1993 bombing that decimated the town
centre in Portadown.
Britain was certainly a political beneficiary of the Omagh
bombing. It led to a widespread public outcry demanding an end
to more than 30 years of violence and helped isolate the dissident
paramilitary groups, both republican and loyalist, opposed to
the signing of the Northern Ireland Agreement.
The bombing provided a pretext for the Blair government to
introduce new laws before a specially recalled Parliament. These
laws, which the Prime Minister himself described as being of a
draconian and fundamental nature, allow the conviction
of someone belonging to a proscribed organisation on the evidence
of a senior police officer alone. A defendants right to
silence was breached, by provisions whereby the refusal to answer
a relevant question or to cooperate with any relevant
inquiry at any time will be regarded as corroboration of
the police officers evidence. The measures also include
unprecedented powers to convict people on the basis of conspiring
within Britain to commit terrorist offences anywhere in the world,
making it possible to criminalise and even ban a swathe of organisations
opposed to regimes friendly towards Britain.
See Also:
Fresh revelations on secret
British terror organisation in Northern Ireland
[15 May 2001]
Blair uses
Omagh bombing to sanction erosion of democratic rights
[27 August 1998]
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