A former leading figure in the Continuity Irish Republican Army (CIRA) dissident republican paramilitary group has been shot dead, Northern Irish police said on Saturday.
Tommy Crossan, 43, once the Belfast leader of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) splinter group, was shot several times on Friday while sitting in an office in the Northern Irish capital.
Police have arrested a 26-year-old man in connection with the killing.
Crossan, who had six children and five grandchildren, was gunned down at a fuel depot in full view of surrounding houses.
“Mr Crossan was shot a number of times at close range in his upper body area as he sat in the office of the business of a family friend,” Northern Irish detective superintendent Jonathan Roberts told reporters.
It was a “brutal and ruthless attack which has no place in society,” he said.
“Mr Crossan was known to police, but no matter what his lifestyle was, absolutely nothing justifies this barbaric action,” he added.
“One line of inquiry centers on individuals or groups who would associate themselves with dissident groupings,” he said.
Crossan, who was believed to have been the subject of a death threat, was once the CIRA’s Belfast leader, but had been expelled from the group some years ago after a dispute.
The CIRA opposes the peace process between Northern Ireland’s broadly Protestant British and Catholic Irish communities.
The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought to an end three decades of sectarian violence in the province and ushered in power-sharing between the communities.
Northern Ireland’s First Minister Peter Robinson, a Protestant unionist, and Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, a Catholic republican and a former commander in the mainstream IRA, both condemned the killing.
“The small minority of people who want to continue terrorizing the community need to understand that they will not be allowed to drag Northern Ireland back to the dark days of the past,” Robinson said.
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