Government ministers to attend Omagh bomb 25th anniversary memorial service

29 people died in the attack in 1998

Michael Gallagher, whose son Aiden died in the Omagh bomb, pictured at the Omagh Garden of Remembrance.
Author: Gareth McCulloughPublished 13th Aug 2023
Last updated 13th Aug 2023

British and Irish government ministers are set to attend a memorial service for the 25th anniversary of the Omagh bombing.

The dissident republican attack in 1998 devastated the Co Tyrone village, killing 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins, and injuring hundreds of others.

It came just months after the historic Belfast/Good Friday Agreement and was the greatest loss of life in a single incident in Northern Ireland's troubled past.

No-one has ever been criminally convicted of the attack.

In 2009, following a landmark civil case taken by families of some of the victims, a judge ruled that five people were all liable for the bomb and ordered them to pay damages.

This year's memorial service comes following the granting of an independent statutory inquiry into the atrocity.

The service is taking place on the closest Sunday to the anniversary date of August 15.

Northern Ireland Office minister Lord Caine and Irish Minister of State for European Affairs and Defence Peter Burke are among those to attend the event at the memorial garden in Omagh later.

A prayer will be read in English, Irish and Spanish during the service in respect of the victims of the bomb, which include a child from Spain and children from Co Donegal.

'A NEW PHASE'

The story of the Omagh bomb is "entering a new phase" 25 years on, with a public inquiry on the horizon, the father of one of the victims has said.

Michael Gallagher, whose son Aiden was among the 29 killed in the dissident republican attack on August 15 1998, said he feels they are in a better place.

Earlier this year, Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris announced that an independent statutory inquiry will be launched to look at the preventability of the blast which devastated the Co Tyrone town.

It came after a High Court judge in Belfast recommended in 2021 that the UK Government should carry out a human rights-compliant investigation into alleged security failures in the lead-up to the attack.

Senior Scottish judge Lord Turnbull has been appointed chairman of the inquiry.

Mr Gallagher stressed that the people responsible for the bomb were those who planned, prepared and delivered the device to Omagh from the Republic of Ireland.

He also made an appeal for anyone who has information that could help the inquiry answer its questions to come forward and speak with officials.

"For the past 23 years, we've been campaigning for a public inquiry," he said.

"That campaign is now over ... there is a huge weight lifted off my shoulders, because we don't need to go around meeting politicians and begging for their support and meeting government ministers.

"We are, on this anniversary, where we want to be, on the cusp of starting the public inquiry, and that will drive the agenda from here on forward.

"And I would encourage everyone, and anyone who has even the slightest piece of information, who can add a piece to the jigsaw, no matter how insignificant they feel it is, I would ask them to engage with the public inquiry.

"People may realise 'Hold on a minute, I have something to say about that. I was there. I've seen this, I've done this', or 'These people have got it wrong, this is the way it was'.

"I welcome that. I think it's very important that everybody has their say regardless of whether I agree or disagree with them. This tribunal will be a tribunal of fact, it will not be of my opinion, my thoughts, my views.

"What really matters is fact and that's the only way you can move forward."

Mr Gallagher met Ireland's deputy premier, Micheal Martin, and justice minister Helen McEntee in Dublin in June.

He said the ministers did not commit to hold an Irish public inquiry into the bomb, but are considering how they will contribute to the UK inquiry.

Mr Gallagher said he hopes the inquiry may be able to start by the end of this year or early next year.

"I have no complaints about how the Secretary of State, the Northern Ireland Office and Lord Turnbull himself are progressing," he said.

"By its nature, it takes time. We're certainly happy with the progress. I believe that Lord Turnbull is well focused, and he will concentrate on the issues that we need addressed.

"If we're lucky it might start at the end of this year, but, apart from the administration, there is a huge volume of information to be read by all concerned, legal teams representing the families, the inquiry and others who get representation."

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