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 | | Posted by admin on Tuesday, April 04, 2006 - 11:12 PM |
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 |  | Former senior Sinn Fein member Denis Donaldson has been found shot dead in the Irish Republic.
Mr Donaldson outside his remote cottage (Picture: Sunday World)
Mr Donaldson was expelled from the party last December after admitting he was a paid British spy for 20 years.
The IRA issued a statement saying it had "no involvement whatsoever" in Mr Donaldson's death in County Donegal.
Irish prime minister Bertie Ahern described the death as
a "brutal murder", while NI Secretary Peter Hain said it was
"barbaric".
Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams said he wanted to
"disassociate (his party) and all republicans who support the peace
process from this killing".
The death of Mr Donaldson came hours before a planned
visit to Northern Ireland by Prime Minister Tony Blair and Mr Ahern to
unveil their blueprint for reviving the assembly at Stormont.
A Downing Street spokesman said that Mr Blair "strongly
condemned" the killing and had noted Mr Adams' statement of
condemnation.
TIMETABLE OF EVENTS
4
October 2002: Three men including Mr Donaldson arrested following raid
on Sinn Fein's Stormont office. Power-sharing executive collapses and
government restores direct rule to NI a week later
8 December 2005: Charges against three men dropped "in the public interest"
16 December 2005: Sinn Fein says Mr Donaldson was a
"British agent" and expels him from the party: he later says he worked
as a spy since the 1980s
Government and police reject the party's claim raid was politically motivated
4 April 2006: Donaldson found shot dead in County Donegal
It is understood that Irish police found two shotgun cartridges close
to the body of Mr Donaldson at his remote cottage in County Donegal.
Irish justice minister Michael McDowell said he understood that Mr Donaldson had extensive damage to his right arm.
Mr Donaldson moved out of his Belfast home last
December, and had been living in the run-down cottage which had neither
electricity nor running water.
His body was found at the cottage near the village of Glenties at about 1700 BST on Tuesday.
A large area surrounding the property has been cordoned off by Irish police for scientific examination.
One of Mr Donaldson's nearest neighbours, who lives more
than a mile away, said he had last seen him driving past on Tuesday
morning.
Mr Donaldson had been Sinn Fein's head of administration
at Stormont before his 2002 arrest over alleged spying led to its
collapse.
Mr Donaldson and two others were acquitted of charges last December "in the public interest".
One week later, Sinn Fein expelled him from the party.
At the time, he told a news conference that he was
recruited in the 1980s as a paid British agent and deeply regretted his
activities.
He said there had not been a republican spy ring at Stormont.
Gerry Adams told the same news conference that Mr Donaldson was not under any threat from the republican movement.
Mr Adams said on Tuesday he had spoken to the Donaldson family just before news of his death broke.
He said he was not prepared to speculate on who might have been responsible.
"It has to be condemned. We are living in a different era, and in the future in which everyone could share," he said.
"This killing seems to have been carried out by those who have not accepted that."
DUP leader Ian Paisley said Mr Donaldson's death would be a setback for the political process.
"If this man has been murdered because of his connection
with the IRA/Sinn Fein, and because of the past happenings, then it
strikes a blow at what the two governments are trying to do," he said. | |
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