An Phoblacht/Republican News

Large tranche of IRA arms destroyed - IICD


October 21, 2003

The IRA has completed a bigger act of decommissioning than ever before, General John de Chastelain reported today.

The head of the international arms body confirmed he had witnessed a third act in which the mainstream IRA had put weapons beyond use.

Automatic guns, ammunition, explosives and explosives material had all been taken out of circulation, he said.

The move is part of republican efforts to finally secure the implementation of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. The Irish and British governments, as well as the Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble, are due to make significant statements of their own later today.

In a press conference a short time ago, General de Chastelain said: "The commission has witnessed a third event in which IRA weapons have been put beyond use, in accordance with government schemes and regulations."

Gen de Chastelain said the decommissioning was "considerably larger" than previous disarmaments.

"The quantity of arms involved is much larger than the quantity put beyond use in the previous event," he said.

He said the arms decommissioned comprised light, medium and heavy ordnance and associated munitions including automatic weapons, ammunition, explosives and explosives materiel.

The General and his colleagues on the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning (IICD) discussed their report after briefing Prime Minister Tony Blair and Irish premier Bertie Ahern at Hillsborough Castle.

The disarmament group said they had assured themselves that all the weapons put beyond use were in operational condition.

They intended to add an inventory of the explosives material to a list from the previous act of decommissioning and provide the full list to the two governments.

The amount of arms rendered permanently unusable "could have caused death and destruction" if it had been used, Andrew Sens, one of General de Chastelain's assistants added.

Earlier this afternoon, the IRA issued a second statement confirming that more weapons had been put beyond use.

The one-paragraph statement said:

"The leadership of Oglaigh na hEireann can confirm that a further act of putting arms beyond use has taken place under the agreed scheme.

Signed
P O'Neill