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A village - its heart ripped out - struggles to comprehend the scale of tragedy

Locals say there’s no-one in the community who won’t know someone who died in the blast.

 Diarmuid Pepper reports from Creeslough: 

AS THE COMMUNITY reels from an unthinkable tragedy, throughout the day locals in Creeslough have been doing whatever they can to help each other out and support the ongoing emergency response. 

Ten people – adults, teenagers, and a young girl aged just five – lost their lives following yesterday’s blast. 

Dozens of emergency workers from across the county and futher afield worked through the night to recover the dead and injured. 

The search and recovery effort at the devastated apartment block at the Applegreen service station has since been scaled back as there are no other people still unaccounted for.

Senior politicians, including the Taoiseach, have begun to arrive and are expected to attend a service this evening alongside grieving locals.

Speaking earlier, Micheál Martin said the government would do everything possible to help the community get through this “enormous trauma”.  

explosion-at-donegal-service-station Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images Brian Lawless / PA Wire/PA Images / PA Wire/PA Images

Around a kilometre from the site this evening – watching the scene before the Taoiseach’s arrival – you got a sense of the ‘Donegal spirit’ that locals say is needed now more than ever.

Men in hi-vis jackets patrolled the narrow routes that traffic has been diverted along, in order to allow the emergency services to carry out their tasks. The local volunteers raised a friendly hand as they directed the public and the media.

At the cordon, which is set back around 80 metres from the explosion, there was a sombre silence as locals try to get their heads around the scale of the tragedy.

Two of the victims were teenagers. Earlier this afternoon a handful of teenagers at the cordon wept as they were consoled by friends and family.

Shattered glass was scattered in the street in front of a house close to the explosion – its windows smashed by the impact of the blast. 

Some of the emergency crew were clearing up the shards earlier today while the homeowners sat against the window ledge, in a state of shock.

Girls in their late teens handed out teas and coffees to the emergency services and members of the public along the cordon.

“Look at that, they’ve been doing that all day,” remarked a guard. “That’s the Donegal spirit.”

At a press conference in nearby Milford later on, Superintendent David Kelly said it was “a tragedy for our community”.

All the victims were from the locality, he confirmed. “Forgive me if I get a bit emotional,” he told reporters at one point, before explaining that while a probe was ongoing the blast was being treated as a tragic accident. 

Back at Creeslough this evening emergency crews involved in the response trudged forlornly from the site of the wreckage to the nearby Coffee Pod.

Usually a hub for tourists staying in nearby glamping pods, it now serves as an impromptu hub for the emergency crews.

Its owner leaves bottles of water on a table outside for the crew, and also comes out periodically with staff to hand out sandwiches and teas and coffees.

Father John Joe Duffy of the Diocese of Raphoe labelled the response to the tragedy as the “national spirit” – noting how crews came from over the border in Derry and Belfast yesterday to help late into the evening and overnight.

At the press conference in Milford, this all-island response was noted several times and emergency crews in the North were thanked for their assistance.

The latest Garda statement, issued just before 6pm tonight, confirmed that the search operation at the scene had now ended. Eight people remain in hospital as of this evening. 

Post-mortems will take place in the coming days, and the community will have to observe multiple funerals as the week progresses.

Sinn Féin Donegal TD Pearse Doherty, who was also at the scene in Creeslough and was among those to greet the Taoiseach, said the close knit community had been turned “upside down”.

“The village here has less than 400 people. People know each other and know the people who are involved,” he told The Journal

The explosion, he said, “not only ripped the heart out of this building, but ripped the heart out of this community”. 

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    Mute Joe Johnson
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    Mar 14th 2019, 12:33 AM

    Let us hope the families finally get justice for what happened that terrible bloody Sunday.

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    Mute pat murphy
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    Mar 14th 2019, 12:47 AM

    Murdered by a foreign army on Irish soil…

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    Mute SFNutters
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    Mar 14th 2019, 8:50 AM

    @pat murphy: horse guards

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    Mute Brian Jones
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    Mar 14th 2019, 12:41 AM

    If it was the case that the soldiers were given advance orders to shoot should they feel it was warranted then that order should be traced up the chain of command. I don’t believe it was a spur of the moment decision

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    Mute Jane
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    Mar 14th 2019, 7:24 AM

    @Brian Jones: I don’t think they needed to feel it was warranted. I was listening to an interview by one of the relatives the other day and he said that one of the soldiers that gave evidence to Saville said that he looked down the barrel of his gun but could see no justification for shooting so he didn’t pull the trigger. Others didn’t seem to care whether it was justified or not.

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    Mute Barry Somers
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    Mar 14th 2019, 5:38 AM

    Will be amazed if these people receive justice, UK 2ont like to admit that it’s own army murdered people

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    Mute Colette Kearns
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    Mar 14th 2019, 7:22 AM

    @Barry Somers: agree , but every army murders people!

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Mar 14th 2019, 8:20 AM

    @Barry Somers: unlikely they will see justice, British soldiers, British courts, British jury…..

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    Mute Maurice Frazer
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    Mar 14th 2019, 9:06 AM

    Had the pleasure of meeting with these wonderful people from Derry recently when they came to Dublin to support our fight for Justice for the Stardust 48.
    We wish them all the best in their quest for Justice. As I have said before…. TRUTH+JUSTICE=PEACE

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    Mute Donal Carey
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    Mar 14th 2019, 9:22 AM

    Give these families justice and peace enough is enough

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    Mute Charles Williams
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    Mar 14th 2019, 10:15 AM

    Like all historic trouble related murders in N.Ireland, it’s time to let go of the past and move on to the future. All trouble related crimes on all sides committed before the signing of the Good Friday Agreement should be subject to a general amnesty. Nobody murdered on any side of the troubles is coming back. Death is a one way street, a shared future is a two way street. Let go of the past and move on to a better, brighter shared future.

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    Mute Sean O'Rourke
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    Mar 14th 2019, 11:06 AM

    @Charles Williams: Easier said than done Charles.

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    Mute Denis McClean
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    Mar 14th 2019, 12:31 PM

    @Charles Williams What you say would make perfect sense but some scars will only begin to heal when everyone associated with them is dead and even then …

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    Mute T Beckett is back
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    Mar 14th 2019, 3:16 PM

    @Charles Williams:

    The British army were never charged, imprisoned, admitted or apologised for their murders, so they’re not covered by the GFA – which also they were against.

    And yet there are still people who were British blood stained poppies.

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