Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Bomb threat empties N. Ireland Assembly
Last updated: 2006-11-24


Bomb threat empties N. Ireland Assembly
2006-11-24

Category
Bombing
People
Tony Blair
Event
Ireland Peace Process
The Northern Ireland Assembly missed another deadline for forming a government Friday, then politicians fled the building after one of the province's most infamous Protestant militants tossed a bomb-filled bag into the entrance.

Police subdued Michael Stone, who killed three people at an Irish Republican Army funeral in 1988. The Northern Ireland police commander, Chief Constable Hugh Orde, later said Stone's bag contained at least six explosive devices that British army experts safely dismantled.

Politicians and journalists were ordered out of Stormont Parliamentary Building as the fire alarm sounded -- and two security guards pinned Stone by both arms to the main doorway. He was later wrestled outside, into pouring rain and wind, as he shouted a favored Protestant militant slogan: "No surrender!"

Stone had abandoned the bag near the building's security checkpoint staff, who operate metal detectors and search bags. He also appeared to have been spray-painting the entrance to Stormont with "Sinn Fein-IRA murderers" or "war criminals," but did not finish it.

Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain ordered an immediate investigation into what he called a "very serious breach of security. ... The chaotic scenes at Stormont were deeply disturbing."

Stone's incursion came minutes after Protestant leader Ian Paisley refused to accept a nomination as the future leader of Northern Ireland's power-sharing administration.

Paisley, whose Democratic Unionist Party is the largest in Northern Ireland, said he would work with Sinn Fein, the IRA-linked party that represents most Catholics, only when it begins to support the police force. If that happened, Paisley said, he would accept the post.

"When Sinn Fein has fulfilled its obligations with regard to the police, the courts and the rule of law, then and only then can progress be made. There can and will be no movement until they face and sign up to their obligations," Paisley told the assembly.

The prime ministers of Britain and Ireland, Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern, said Stone's threat illustrated why rival British Protestant and Irish Catholic politicians should compromise and form a stable coalition as the Good Friday peace accord intended.

More than seven months ago, Blair and Ahern announced that Nov. 24 would be their final deadline for a power-sharing deal -- but both on Friday shrugged off this commitment and insisted that Paisley's statement contained the hope of future progress.

Both premiers said they expected Sinn Fein to clear the way for Paisley by accepting the authority of the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Sinn Fein insists it will not take this step first, if at all.

"It seems that Michael Stone has gone on the rampage again, in a very dangerous way. But he was stopped," Ahern said in Dublin. "It just shows you exactly what we are trying to get away from in Northern Ireland."

"No move forward in Northern Ireland is easy. We've learned that over 10 years," said Blair, who has closely cooperated with Ahern in brokering compromise in Northern Ireland since both premiers rose to power in 1997. "And it's not because the people, or indeed, the leaders in Northern Ireland want it to be so, but because each step towards a different and better future is taken alongside the memory of a wretched and divisive past."

Stone was responsible for one of Northern Ireland's most dramatic days -- March 16, 1988, when he launched a solo gun-and-grenade strike on an IRA funeral. He killed three mourners, among them an IRA man, and wounded about 60 other people before a pursuing Catholic mob surrounded and badly beat him.

Stone was paroled from prison in 2000 under terms of the 1998 peace pact, which permitted early releases for more than 500 convicted members of the IRA and outlawed Protestant paramilitary groups. He took part in a televised discussion with relatives of a Catholic man he had shot to death in a different attack.

Despite Paisley's refusal, Hain said his words were sufficient to keep the assembly intact until the end of January, when Britain plans to dissolve it anyway.

An election to a new assembly is scheduled March 7. Britain expects the members to elect all 12 members of the administration, to be led by Paisley and McGuinness, on March 14. If this happened, Britain would transfer control of Northern Ireland's 13 government departments to the administration March 26.

 Ireland Peace Process  
  Profile1 News103GalleryLinks  
  Clinton in Belfast seeks power-sharing progress (2009-10-12)
  Massive bomb defused in N.Ireland: police (2009-09-08)
  Top Irish republican charged with killing soldiers (2009-03-27)
  US 'condemns' N. Ireland shootings (2009-03-08)
  Former IRA guerrilla leader Brian Keenan dies (2008-05-21)
  NIreland paramilitary renounces violence (2007-11-11)
  Lessing says Sept. 11 attacks not so bad (2007-10-22)
  Northern Ireland enters new power-sharing era (2007-05-08)
  Old foes elected in Northern Ireland (2007-05-08)
  N. Ireland parties seal power-sharing deal (2007-03-26)
  Northern Ireland parties announce deal (2007-03-26)
  Blair, Ahern urge power-sharing after N.Irish vote (2007-03-09)
  Northern Ireland takes step to power sharing (2007-03-08)
  In a 1st, Sinn Fein votes to back police (2007-01-28)
  Sinn Fein vote for watershed conference on N. Ireland policing (2006-12-29)
  Paramilitary killer disrupts N.Irish self-rule talks (2006-11-25)
  Bomb threat empties N. Ireland Assembly (2006-11-24)
  Crunch Northern Ireland talks go into overtime (2006-10-13)
  Britain, Ireland seek to tee up NIreland peace deal (2006-10-11)
  IRA continues to demilitarize in N.Ireland: report (2006-04-26)
  N. Ireland Legislature to Meet Next Month (2006-04-06)
  Spy's Death Complicates Peace Process (2006-04-05)
  IRA-Protestant Brawls Spread in Dublin (2006-02-25)
  Inspectors Confirm IRA's Disarmament (2005-09-26)
  UK army pulls down N.Irish watchposts to aid peace (2005-07-29)
Related People
  • Bill Clinton
  • Related Events
  • U.S. Diplomacy
  • U.S. Bush Admin.

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [2005 Hurricane Katrina]: 59 and counting: Health care bill nears test vote (12:37 11/21)


    [2009 US Health Reform]: 59 and counting: Health care bill nears test vote (12:37 11/21)


    [111th Congress]: 59 and counting: Health care bill nears test vote (12:37 11/21)


    [2009 Swine Flu]: Experts say radical measures won't stop swine flu (08:24 11/19)


    [2008 EU Recession]: Europe's recovery will be 'gradual': OECD (08:24 11/19)

    [China-U.S.]: Obama meets Wen as China visit winds down (22:06 11/17)


    [Obama Stimulus Package]: Govt report: Over $98B wasted in improper payments (22:06 11/17)


    [2009 Fort Hood Shootings]: Fort Hood slayings prompt full Pentagon review (22:06 11/17)

    [Mideast Peace]: White House: Israeli housing plans dismaying (22:06 11/17)


    [2001 Moussaoui Trial]: First US trial of 9/11 case was full of surprises (16:06 11/17)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.