Former Real IRA leader Michael McKevitt dies from cancer aged 71
Former Real IRA leader Michael McKevitt who was behind Omagh bomb that killed 29 dies from cancer aged 71
- He was one of four men found liable for horrific attack which killed 29 in 1998
- McKevitt was released from prison in 2016 after serving a 20-year sentence
- Paramilitary leader was diagnosed with terminal cancer a number of years ago
Former Real IRA leader Michael McKevitt, who plotted the 1998 Omagh bombing, has died from cancer aged 71.
He was one of four men found liable for the horrific attack which killed 29 victims and marked the single deadliest atrocity during the Troubles.
McKevitt was released from prison in 2016 after serving a 20-year sentence for directing terrorism and membership of an illegal organisation.
The Irish paramilitary leader was diagnosed with terminal cancer a number of years ago, and today the Republican Network for Unity said it was ‘deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our friend and comrade.’
But a husband whose wife was killed by the explosion said he hopes McKevitt is ‘happy in hell’.
Former Real IRA leader Michael McKevitt, who plotted the 1998 Omagh bombing, has died from cancer aged 71
The horrific attack killed 29 victims and marked the single deadliest atrocity during the Troubles
From Co Louth, McKevitt persistently denied involvement in the Omagh bombing, but in 2009 a judge ruled in a landmark civil trial that McKevitt, Liam Campbell, Colm Murphy and Seamus Daly were all liable.
He ordered them to pay a total of £1.6million damages to 12 relatives who took the case. A fifth man, Seamus McKenna, was cleared of liability for the car bombing.
Nobody has ever been convicted of the dissident republican bomb attack, whose victims including a woman pregnant with twins.
Today Stanley McComb, whose wife Ann was among the dead, told the Belfast Telegraph: ‘It doesn’t bother me one bit that he’s died.’
The 500lb car bomb was detonated on Market Street in Omagh on August 15, 1998.
The 500lb car bomb was detonated on Market Street in Omagh on August 15, 1998
In the hour before the attack, two phone calls were made to Ulster TV and the Samaritans alerting them to an imminent bomb attack in the nearby courthouse – both calls used the IRA codeword ‘Martha Pope’.
Police swooped in to evacuate people from the courthouse on to Market Street, where the bomb in the red Vauxhall Cavalier was then detonated.
Among those gathered was a group of Spanish students who were spending the summer in Buncrana. They had gone to Omagh for the day along with a number of local children from the Co Donegal town.
The attack came just four months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, which was meant to end the years of conflict in Northern Ireland.
Significantly, Sinn Fein figures such as Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness – who negotiated the accords – condemned the attack. It was the first time they had unequivocally denounced a republican terrorist bombing.
McKevitt had initially joined the Provisional IRA before founding the Real IRA as a dissident offshoot in 1997.
In 2019, McKevitt was adjudicated bankrupt in the High Court following failure to pay out the damages.
The 71-year-old was married to Bernadette Sands McKevitt, a sister of IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands.