Source:
The Observer (UK)• Republican dissidents see attack as 'top prize' on hit list
• Tory MP Patrick Mercer says threat to mainland is 'worrying'
Mark Townsend and Toby Helm
The Observer, Sunday August 22 2010
Irish republican dissident groups are targeting the Conservative party conference this autumn, raising fears of a repeat of the 1984 Brighton attack that nearly killed the then prime minister, Margaret Thatcher.
Sources in Northern Ireland said that the October conference in central Birmingham had emerged as the prize target on a hit list drawn up by resurgent republican paramilitaries. Patrick Mercer, ex-chairman of the Commons subcommittee on counter-terrorism, said former senior police and army intelligence officers had informed him that dissident splinter groups had discussed targeting David Cameron's first conference as prime minister.
He said: "They want to kill by the end of August in order to get themselves poised for whatever operations they can mount in September leading up to the Tory party conference in early October. There are doubts over whether they have the capability, but the aspiration is certainly there and West Midlands police would be crazy not to take the threat seriously." The West Midlands force confirmed it was aware of increased activity by dissident republicans and said its counter-terrorism unit was constantly assessing the threat ahead of the Conservative party conference.
Last night Owen Paterson, the Northern Ireland secretary, said the government was monitoring the situation, and insisted there was now "unprecedented co-ordination" between the security services and police responsible for tracking those responsible. "We have made a substantial number of arrests and we are bearing down on them," he said. "But we do not underestimate the threat they represent."
Read more:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/aug/22/irish-terror-threat-conservative-conference
A nationalist protester throws a missile at police in the Ardoyne area
of north Belfast in July. Photograph: Cathal McNaughton/Reuters