Martin McGuinness calls The IRA CRIMINALS
Dissident republicans are
being blamed for murders in Derry and Belfast which the PSNI have described as
brutal, callous and cold-blooded.
A relatively new republican
paramilitary grouping calling itself “the IRA” admitted shooting father-of-four
Kevin Kearney (46) in north Belfast on Tuesday while local politicians were in
no doubt that dissidents were responsible for the murder of Barry McCrory in
Derry yesterday morning.
Mr McCrory (35), who was
shot dead by a lone gunman in a flat in Shipquay Street, Derry city centre
yesterday morning, was known to police for drugs activity.
PSNI Detective Chief
Inspector Ian Harrison said the killing was a “brutal execution” of an
individual. “No person has a right to be judge, jury and executioner.”
SDLP Assembly member Pat
Ramsey was in the area when the shooting happened. “There is no doubt
whatsoever that dissidents were involved. Once again there are those in our
community who are intent on destroying the unity of purpose that can only
benefit everyone, especially our young people,” he said.
He said numerous tourists in
Derry for events as part of the UK City of Culture were in the area where the
shooting happened. Mr Ramsey added that he also saw what he understood to be
the murdered man’s partner being taken away by ambulance “in a terrible state
of distress”.
“His father and mother and
brother also came to the scene and could not be allowed see the body by the
police. It was very emotional, very distressing,” he said.
Investment event
The killings happened as a
major international investment event takes place in Northern Ireland. It opened
with a dinner in Hillsborough Castle last night to be followed by a conference
in Belfast today, which the British prime minister David Cameron is attending.
The dissident grouping that
killed Mr McCrory may be the same organisation responsible for the murder of Mr
Kearney in north Belfast. He went missing when he brought his dogs for a walk
on Tuesday after leaving one of his children to school. His body was found on
Wednesday in a lake in Alexandra Park in north Belfast.
Detective Chief Insp Justyn
Galloway said, “Kevin was known to us for previous offending, but what I want
to make clear is regardless of Kevin’s lifestyle, regardless of his previous
offending, there is no justification whatsoever for someone to shoot him dead
as they did.”
An organisation called “the
IRA” that was formed in July of last year said in a statement to the Irish News
that it killed Mr Kearney “in response to complaints within our community”.
Sinn Féin Deputy First
Minister Martin McGuinness said those responsible for the killings “were not
republican, they were not representative and they were entirely criminal in
their motivation”.
Condemning the killings the
Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore said, “The people who claim responsibility for this have
no mandate and their actions lead nowhere. The people of Belfast and Derry, and
indeed people all over Ireland, have moved on. There is no justification for
such crimes against the community.”
The Northern Secretary
Theresa Villiers said the killings were “abhorrent and brutal”.
No comments:
Post a Comment