Northern Irish police suspect New IRA behind shooting of detective
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[February 23, 2023]
By Amanda Ferguson
BELFAST (Reuters) -Northern Irish police suspect that the New IRA Irish
nationalist militant group may have been responsible for the attempted
murder of a senior detective who was shot in front of his son on
Wednesday evening in the town of Omagh.
Detective Chief Inspector John Caldwell was shot a number of times by
two gunmen while putting footballs in his car after a youth training
session, Assistant Chief Constable Mark McEwan said. He remains in a
critical condition in hospital.
The gunmen continued to fire while the detective was on the ground,
McEwan said. Both gunmen fired multiple shots and at least two other
vehicles were struck in a crowded car park where parents and children
ran to get to safety, he added.
The suspects' car was found burnt out just outside Omagh, the scene of
the worst attack of Northern Ireland's "Troubles" when nationalist
militants killed 29 people by detonating a car bomb on a busy shopping
street four months after a 1998 peace deal.
"We are keeping an open mind, there are multiple strands to that
investigation. The primary focus is on violent dissident republicans and
within that there is a primary focus as well on New IRA," McEwan told
BBC Northern Ireland.
While the peace agreement largely ended three decades of sectarian
violence in Northern Ireland, police officers are still sporadically
targeted by splinter groups of mostly Irish nationalist militants
opposed to Britain's rule over the region.
The New IRA, a small militant nationalist group opposed to the peace
deal, has targeted police previously and was responsible for the killing
of journalist Lyra McKee in 2019.
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The last time a police officer was shot in Northern Ireland was 2017
and the United Kingdom last year lowered its Northern
Ireland-related terrorism threat level for the first time in more
than a decade.
The threat from domestic groups was lowered to "substantial" from
"severe", according to an independent assessment by the MI5 domestic
spy service. Police said at the time that operations against
nationalist militants were making attacks less likely.
Caldwell, who a friend told the BBC is in his late 40s, has been a
senior detective for a number of years and has investigated a lot of
serious crimes and terrorist activity, Police Federation for
Northern Ireland Chair Liam Kelly said.
Caldwell was not subject to any more of a threat than any other
officer, Kelly said, citing discussions he had following the attack.
"Unfortunately this is a stark reminder for our colleagues that 25
years on from the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, policing in
Northern Ireland is still a very dangerous occupation and carries
extreme risk," Kelly said.
"Clearly these people have done some research on what John was doing
and have taken advantage of the fact that he is out there
volunteering with young people and have used that forum to try and
basically murder him. It is absolutely barbaric."
(Reporting by Amanda Ferguson, writing by Padraic Halpin; editing by
William James and Nick Macfie)
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