From Deseret News archives:
IRA splinter Irish National Liberation Army group disarms; no apology for carnage
DUBLIN — A ruthless IRA splinter group, the Irish National Liberation Army, declared Monday it had fully disarmed but offered no regrets for committing some of the worst atrocities of the Northern Ireland conflict.
"We make no apology for our part in the conflict," said INLA spokesman Martin McMonagle, who spent seven years in prison for plotting to plant bombs in England and assassinate Northern Ireland's senior Protestant politicians.
Northern Ireland's disarmament chief, retired Canadian Gen. John de Chastelain, confirmed he and other officials had received and destroyed Irish National Liberation Army guns, ammunition, explosives and bomb parts. In a statement he said INLA officials — who have observed a shaky cease-fire since 1998 — had said the weapons represented their entire arsenal.
The general also confirmed that a long-dormant faction, the Official Irish Republican Army, recently handed over its modest stockpile of guns. The Officials were the first IRA faction to call a cease-fire, in 1972, but remained a racketeering and money-laundering force in working-class Catholic parts of Belfast.
De Chastelain declined to provide further details in keeping with his clandestine efforts since 1997 to persuade all Northern Ireland's underground armies to surrender weapons.
He already has confirmed the disarmament of the most elaborately armed group, the Provisional IRA, in 2001-2005, followed by the province's two major British Protestant paramilitary groups, the Ulster Volunteer Force and Ulster Defense Association, in June 2009 and January 2010, respectively.
The Anglo-Irish legislation that empowered de Chastelain to collect weapons expires Tuesday in Northern Ireland and Feb. 23 in the Republic of Ireland. After that, anyone caught with paramilitary weapons likely faces prison time.
De Chastelain and his largely Finnish and American staff are expected to shut their offices in Belfast and Dublin after publishing a final progress report to the British and Irish governments later this month.
The only paramilitary gangs still committed to keeping weapons are two small anti-British factions, the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA, which reject Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord. Both groups still mount occasional bombings and shootings in Northern Ireland.
Leaders of Sinn Fein — the IRA-linked party that is the major Irish Catholic voice in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government with Protestants — said the INLA move underscored that today's dissident violence is futile.











