The Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) is an Irish republican paramilitary organization which was formed on December 8, 1974. It is the military wing of the Irish Republican Socialist Movement (a political wing, the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP), was formed the same day). It enjoyed its peak of influence in the late 1970s and early '80s and is now one of a number of small armed republican groups in Ireland. It has been alleged that members have sometimes used the cover names PLA (People's Liberation Army), CRF (Catholic Reaction Force) or the PRA (People's Republican Army) for operations the INLA did not want to claim.
On 20 February 1975, Hugh Ferguson, an INLA member and an IRSP branch chairperson, was the first person to be killed in the feud. One of the first military operations of the INLA was the murder of Billy McMillan, a leading OIRA member in Belfast and this was followed by several more assassinations on both sides, the most prominent victim being Seamus Costello, who was shot dead on North Wall in Dublin on 6 October 1977. Costello's death was a severe blow to the INLA, as he was their most able political and military leader.
The INLA lost another of its founding leadership in 1980, when Ronnie Bunting a rare Protestant Republican, was assassinated at his home by the Ulster Defence Association. Two other leading INLA members were also killed in this year, Miriam Daly and Noel Lyttle. The INLA claimed the SAS was involved in the killings. Offensive INLA actions at this time included the 1982 bombing of the Mount Gabriel radar station in County Cork, which was providing assistance to NATO, allegedly in violation of Irish neutrality; and the 6 December 1982 Ballykelly disco bombing of the Droppin' Well Bar in Ballykelly, County Londonderry, which catered to British military personnel, in which 11 soldiers and 6 civilians were killed. It emerged later at the trial that INLA members from Derry City had carried out several reconnaissance missions "to see if there were enough soldiers to justify the possibility of civilian killings".
Members of the INLA participated in the 1980 and 1981 hunger strikes for the recognition of the political status of paramilitary prisoners. Three INLA members died during the latter hunger strike - Patsy O'Hara, Kevin Lynch, and Michael Devine. In terms of prestige in Irish republicanism, this turned out to be the high water mark for the INLA.
On 20 November 1983, three members of the congregation in the Mountain Lodge Pentecostal Church, Darkley near Keady, County Armagh were shot dead during a Sunday service. The attack was claimed by the Catholic Reaction Force, a cover name for a small group of people, including one member of the INLA. The weapon used came from an INLA arms dump, but Tim Pat Coogan claims in his book The IRA that the weapon had been given to the INLA member to assassinate a known loyalist and the attack on the church was not sanctioned. The INLA's then chief of staff, Dominic McGlinchey, came out of hiding to condemn the attack.
Shortly after the feud with the IPLO, in 1987 the INLA kidnapped a Dublin dentist, John O'Grady, and held him for ransom. The kidnap was led by Dessie O'Hare, better known as "The Border Fox". O'Hare cut off several of O'Grady's fingers to try and force his family to pay the ransom. Eventually, O'Hare was arrested by the Gardaí, O'Grady was released and another INLA member was killed in a shoot out with the Gardaí.
In 1995, four members of the INLA, including chief of staff Hugh Torney, were arrested by Gardai in Balbriggan while trying to smuggle weapons from Dublin to Belfast. Torney, with the support of two of his co-accused, called a ceasefire in exchange for favorable treatment by the Irish authorities. Since Torney, who was chief of staff,under the INLA's rules lacked the authority to call a ceasefire, he and the two men who supported him were expelled from the INLA.
Torney and one of those men, Dessie McCleery,and founder member John Fennell were not going to surrender the leadership of the organistion. Their faction, known as the INLA/GHQ, assassinated the new INLA chief of staff, Gino Gallagher. After the INLA killed both McCleery and Torney in 1996, the rest of Torney's faction quietly disbanded.
In December 1997, three members of the INLA imprisoned in Long Kesh assassinated LVF leader Billy Wright, also known as "King Rat."
The INLA declared a ceasefire on August 22, 1998. Although it does not support the Good Friday Agreement, it does not call for a return to armed struggle on behalf of republicans either. It maintains a presence in parts of Northern Ireland and has carried out punishment beatings on alleged local petty criminals.
The Independent Monitoring Commission which monitors paramilitary activity in Northern Ireland, claimed in its report of November 2004 that, the INLA is heavily involved in criminality, especially drugs trafficking. In 1999, the INLA in Dublin became involved in feud with a criminal gang in the west of the city. A young INLA man named Patrick Campbell was killed by drug dealers and the INLA has carried out several shootings in reprisal, including at least one killing. Irish journalist Paul Williams has also claimed the INLA, especially in Dublin, is now primarily a front for organised crime. The IRSP and INLA deny these allegations, arguing that no one has been simultaneously convicted of membership in the INLA and of drug offences. The IRSP and the INLA have both strongly denied any involvement with drug dealing, and stated that the INLA has threatened criminals which it claims have falsely used its name.
The INLA has recently claimed to have put at least two drugs gangs out of business in Northern Ireland. After their raid on a Derry-based criminal organization, they released a statement saying that "the Irish National Liberation Army will not allow the working class people of this city to be used as cannon fodder by these criminals whose only concern is profit by whatever means available to them."http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/story.jsp?story=684795 Belfast Telegraphhttp://www.indymedia.ie/article/75297 Indymedia
According to the Sutton database of deaths at the University of Ulster's CAIN project *, the INLA was responsible for 113 deaths during the Troubles. Among its victims were 46 members of the British security forces, 42 civilians, 2 members of the Garda Síochána, 7 loyalist paramilitaries and 16 republican paramilitaries (including 10 of its own members).
Irregular military | Irish National Liberation Army
Irish National Liberation Army | Irish National Liberation Army
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