- Tractor-driving French farmers protest EU-Mercosur deal
- Floods hit northern Philippines after typhoon forces dam release
- Markets mixed after Wall St losses as traders weigh US rates outlook
- Law and disorder as Thai police station comes under monkey attack
- Philippines cleans up as typhoon death toll rises
- Long delayed Ukrainian survival video game sequel set for release amid war
- Philippines cleans up after sixth major storm in weeks
- Markets swing after Wall St losses as traders weigh US rates outlook
- Gabon early results show voters back new constitution
- Is AI's meteoric rise beginning to slow?
- Biden touts climate legacy in landmark Amazon visit
- Biden clears Ukraine for long-range missile strikes inside Russia
- 'Nobody can reverse' US progress on clean energy: Biden
- Biden allows Ukraine to strike Russia with long-range missiles: US official
- Biden clears Ukraine for missile strikes inside Russia
- Ukrainians brave arduous journeys to Russian-occupied homeland
- 'Devil is in the details,' EU chief says of S.America trade deal
- Toll in Tanzania building collapse rises to 13, survivors trapped
- 'Red One' tops N.America box office but could end up in the red
- Biden begins historic Amazon trip amid Trump climate fears
- Macron defends French farmers in talks with Argentina's Milei
- India and Nigeria renew ties as Modi visits
- Typhoon Man-yi weakens as it crosses Philippines' main island
- 迪拜棕榈岛索菲特美憬阁酒店: 五星級健康綠洲
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: Пятизвездочный велнес-оазис
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: A five-star wellness Oasis
- Power cuts as Russian missiles pound Ukraine's energy grid
- Biden in historic Amazon trip as Trump return sparks climate fears
- India hails 'historic' hypersonic missile test flight
- Debt-saddled Laos struggles to tame rampant inflation
- India's vinyl revival finds its groove
- Climate finance can be hard sell, says aide to banks and PMs
- Egypt's middle class cuts costs as IMF-backed reforms take hold
- Dinosaur skeleton fetches 6 million euros in Paris sale
- Trump's Republican allies tread lightly on Paris pact at COP29
- China's Xi urges APEC unity in face of 'protectionism'
- Farmers target PM Starmer in protest against new UK tax rules
- UN climate chief urges G20 to spur tense COP29 negotiations
- Philippines warns of 'potentially catastrophic' Super Typhoon Man-yi
- Tens of thousands flee as Super Typhoon Man-yi nears Philippines
- Gabon votes on new constitution hailed by junta as 'turning point'
- Tens of thousands flee as Typhoon Man-yi nears Philippines
- Is Argentina's Milei on brink of leaving Paris climate accord?
- Fitch upgrades Argentina debt rating amid economic pain
- Trump picks Doug Burgum as energy czar in new administration
- At summit under Trump shadow, Xi and Biden signal turbulence ahead
- Xi warns against 'protectionism' at APEC summit under Trump cloud
- Xi, Biden at Asia-Pacific summit under Trump trade war cloud
- Leftist voices seek to be heard at Rio's G20 summit
- Boeing strike will hurt Ethiopian Airlines growth: CEO
Omagh bomb still haunts N.Ireland's fragile peace 25 years on
On a bright Saturday in August almost 25 years ago, Kevin Skelton was rejoining his family shopping for new school shoes in Omagh's town centre when a massive bomb went off.
Amid the ensuing carnage, he clambered through a hole in the shop's storefront trying to reach his wife Philomena and their three girls.
"I found Mena lying face down in the rubble," said Skelton, who recalled checking her for a pulse. "I could find nothing."
Philomena, who was aged 39, was carrying the couple's unborn twins.
She was one of 29 people killed when the car bomb planted by the Real IRA exploded next to the shop on August 15, 1998.
Skelton's daughter Shauna was among the more than 200 people who were injured, while his other two girls escaped physically unscathed.
It was the deadliest attack in three decades of violence in Northern Ireland known as "The Troubles".
Skelton is still haunted by the apocalyptic scene and "the cries of pain" as he searched for his family that day.
"What in God's name was it all for?" the 68-year-old asked.
Although Northern Ireland has remained largely peaceful during that time, he fears a similar attack by paramilitary groups, which are vastly diminished but remain a serious threat.
"You always have that fear. You only need one lunatic to put a bomb in the boot of a car... and park it in a main street and walk away," Skelton told AFP.
- 'Galvanising effect' -
The Omagh bombing came four months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, which aimed to end "The Troubles".
It was perpetrated during an IRA ceasefire by dissident Republicans opposed to the deal.
"Despite that terrible tragedy, it actually had a galvanising effect on the peace process because it came so soon after the Good Friday Agreement," Queen's University Belfast academic Peter McLoughlin said.
But the political historian noted "hardcore" remnants remain within both pro-UK loyalist and pro-Ireland republican communities, with police noting around a third of organised crime is also directly linked to paramilitaries.
"There will always tend to be groups who have this extreme position, that violence is the way forward and will try and exploit the political difficulties," McLoughlin said.
Northern Ireland has been without a devolved government for much of the past six years, amid multiple breakdowns in power-sharing between the two communities.
Loyalist paramilitaries -- namely the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and Ulster Defence Association (UDA) -- number an estimated 12,500, according to information provided to the BBC by Northern Irish police and Britain's MI5 domestic intelligence agency.
The New IRA, the most prominent dissident Republican paramilitary group, is far smaller, with merely dozens of members.
Despite its size, it has carried out several high-profile attacks in recent years.
In April 2021, the group planted a bomb by a policewoman's car in what police called an attempt to kill her and her daughter.
In February, the group shot John Caldwell, a senior police officer in Omagh, as he left a sports complex with his son while off-duty.
Shortly afterwards, the UK government raised Northern Ireland's terrorism threat level, citing the continuing threat of political violence.
- 'No right' -
The attacks have heightened deep unease within Northern Irish police over their vulnerability, made worse by two separate data leaks announced this week which revealed the personal details of thousands of staff.
The last police officer killed by dissident Republicans was Ronan Kerr. A bomb was placed under his car and exploded outside his home in Omagh in 2011.
Meanwhile the civilian population has been left scarred by the decades of violence, with 15 to 30 percent of people impacted by "paramilitary harm", according to official estimates.
Anthony McIntyre, a former Provisional IRA gunman, was jailed for 18 years for the 1976 killing of a UVF member.
Released from prison in 1992 and now a writer and academic, he initially continued to support the IRA's bombing campaign but by the 1998 Omagh attack had renounced violence.
"I was appalled by it," he said. "We simply had no right."
McIntyre joined the IRA in 1973 because of "events on the street, British Army harassment, loyalist killings", but also because "it seemed romantic".
He rejects today's New IRA as a "cult", arguing that acts like Caldwell's assassination attempt have "appalling logic".
"The people who came to kill John Caldwell weren't doing anything at all other than trying to introduce mayhem as part of a failed military and political struggle," McIntyre said.
And to do that in Omagh, in particular, was like "visiting the scene of the crime to desecrate it," he added.
T.Morelli--CPN