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(File) Damage caused by the Omagh Bombing attack in Co Tyrone in 1998. Alamy Stock Photo
Northern Ireland

Government formally agrees to cooperate with inquiry into Omagh bombing

Tánaiste Micheál Martin and Justice Minister Helen McEntee secured approval to provide assistance to the inquiry at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

THE GOVERNMENT HAS formally agreed to provide assistance to UK’s independent inquiry into the Omagh bombing.

The dissident republican bomb exploded in the Co Tyrone town on 15 August 1998, killing 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins.

The British Government outlined its terms of reference for the independent probe in February.

It will be chaired by Alan Turnbull and will examine alleged security failings that led a High Court judge to conclude the atrocity could plausibly have been prevented.

Tánaiste and Foreign Affairs Minister Micheál Martin and Justice Minister Helen McEntee secured approval to provide assistance to the inquiry at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

A Government spokesman said this “honours a commitment” given to Omagh families.

“Ireland has accepted the invitation of the inquiry chairman Lord Alan Turnbull to be represented at a preliminary hearing on the 30 July,” the spokesperson said.

“This is a complex process that involves working with another jurisdiction but we do have recent precedent for doing this.

“For example, the Omagh civil case and we also produced legislative means to assist inquests in Northern Ireland with Operation Denton and the independent review of activities into the Glennane gang.

“Officials will now explore a memo of understanding for the State’s engagement with this upcoming inquiry.”

Martin has said the Government intends to do “everything possible” to assist the inquiry.

Officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Department of Justice continue to work with the inquiry team on how best to structure Irish engagement with the inquiry.

The inquiry will examine the adequacy of the measures taken by UK state authorities, including the police, security forces and intelligence and security agencies, to disrupt dissident republicans who had been involved in attacks from December 1997 up to and including the Omagh bombing.

It will assess whether that approach changed following the Good Friday Agreement of April 1998.

It will also probe alleged intelligence-sharing failures between the UK and Irish authorities in the year and a half leading up to the bombing.

A number of families of Omagh victims have repeatedly called for an inquiry to also be carried out into the bombing in Ireland.

However, Martin has previously said he did not think it made sense to have two separate inquiries on both sides of the Irish border.

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