In a 12-page report the IMC said: "We are aware of the questions posed about the public disbandment of (Provisional Irish Republican Army's) PIRA's leadership structures. We believe that PIRA has chosen another method of bringing what it describes as its armed struggle to a final close. Under PIRA's own rules the Army Council was the body that directed its military campaign. Now that that campaign is well and truly over, the Army Council by deliberate choice is no longer operational or functional."
The report concluded: "The mechanism which they have chosen to bring the armed conflict to a complete end has been the standing down of the structures which engaged in the armed campaign and the conscious decision to allow the Army Council to fall into disuse. By taking these steps PIRA has completely relinquished the leadership and other structures appropriate to a time of armed conflict."
Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward said the report confirmed that the IRA had ceased to function. "This groundbreaking report by the IMC makes clear that the Army Council is now redundant... As the IMC made clear, 'the leadership structures have definitely ceased to function in the way they did during the ‘time of conflict'
The British and Irish Governments had asked the IMC, made up of security experts and politicians from the UK and Ireland, to compile a special report on the status of IRA structures. Prior to the official release of the report today, it was speculated that the IMC would conclude that the Army Council remained in place, but was not engaged in any illegal activity.
Today in its report the IMC, which monitors paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland, said the IRA's redundant structures were gradually disappearing, but said it did not expect any announcements from the republican movement as that process concluded. "We believe that for some time now it has given up what it used to do and that by design it is being allowed to wither away," said the report. It added: "In our view the way in which the leadership has adopted an entirely different course, disbanded terrorist-related structures and capacity and engaged in different activities, and members have moved on to other things, means that the PIRA of the recent and violent past is well beyond recall."
Here's hoping that the effective disbandment of the Army Council is the final nail in the PIRA coffin. Here’s hoping, therefore, that the PIRA is now just part of Northern Ireland’s bloody past and not its present.... and that the “dissident” IRA groups remain a toothless rabble.
5 comments:
Something to raise a glass of Irish whiskey too!
I wonder what effect the IRA had on people deciding to name their newborn sons, Ira. They may have dealt a death knell to that namesake with their terrorist doings!
Let us hope indeed.
I thinks so EWBL.. Jameseons and some Middleton! Interestingly back in the 80s an US judge dealing with an extradition request of a prov went with the utterly appropriate name Ira H Block...
Absolutely Liz
Uisce beaha?! Where? I'll be there. Sláinte! :)
By the way, rather than Ira (rage, wrath, choler) Life of Water is / would be a nice name, would you agree? :)
Even more seriously: It's good news, yes, and there's hope. In ten years we shall know more.
This refers to the 'organisations' on both sides.
I hope in the future years time the people of a peaceful and harmonious Northern Ireland will look ack at the sectarian violence and wonder why their ancestors were so primitive.
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