| 1994 Heathrow mortar attacks | |
|---|---|
| Part ofThe Troubles | |
| Location | Heathrow Airport, London, England, UK |
| Date | First attack 9 March 1994 Second attack 11 March 1994 Third attack 13 March 1994 (GMT) |
| Target | Heathrow Airport |
Attack type | Mortar barrage |
| Deaths | 0 |
| Injured | 0 |
| Perpetrator | Provisional IRA |
| Motive | Irish republicanism |
The1994 Heathrow mortar attacks were a series ofhomemade mortar bomb attacks targeted atHeathrow Airport carried out by theProvisional IRA. Over a five-day period, Heathrow was targeted three times (9, 11, and 13 March) by the IRA, which fired 12 mortar rounds. Heathrow was a symbolic target due to its importance to the United Kingdom's economy, and much disruption was caused when areas of the airport were closed over the period due to the IRA attacks. The gravity of the incident was heightened by the fact that QueenElizabeth II was being flown back to Heathrow by theRAF on 10 March.
TheProvisional IRA had first attackedGreat Britain in March 1973with car bombs in London which injured over 200 people.[1][2] Beginning in October 1974 the IRAlaunched a sustained bombing campaign in England[3] which lasted untilDecember 1975 when the IRA unit responsible for the campaign was caught after a 6-day siege.[4] Thereafter the IRA launched more sporadic but more spectacular attacks on Britain which generated worldwide publicity like theHyde Park and Regent's Park bombings (which killed 11 British soldiers, injured dozens of soldiers and civilians and killed 7 horses)[5] and an attempt to kill the then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher with the 1984Brighton bombing.[6]In September 1989, the IRA launched what became another more sustained bombing campaign on Britain when theybombedDealbarracks, killing 11bandsmen. In May 1990 a British Army Service Education Centre in Eltham, S London SE9, injuring five people.[7] On 7 February 1991 the IRA carried out mortar attackDowning Street an attempt to assassinatePrime MinisterJohn Major and hisWar Cabinet, who were meeting to discuss theGulf War. One of the heavy mortar shells exploded in the back garden of number 10, only yards from the cabinet office. Due to the bomb-proof windows, none of the cabinet were hurt, though four other people received minor injuries, including two police officers. The other two shells overshot Downing Street and landed on a green nearby. In 1992 the IRA launched over 30 attacks on Britain. Unlike the campaign in the 1970s, the 1990s bombing campaign in England was aimed more at economic targets. In April 1992 the IRAexploded two bombs at theBaltic Exchange in the centre of London and killed three people, including a 15-year-old girl. The IRA warning proved to be inadequate and added to the confusion as it mentioned the Stock Exchange, there it was reported in the media that insurance claims amounted to£800 million. The estimated figure for the whole of Northern Ireland since the start of the conflict back in 1969 until then was £615 million.[8] Almost a year later the1993 Bishopsgate bombing killed one man and injured over 30 people in the explosion. Later estimates put the cost of repair for the Bishopsgate bomb at £350 million (some initial reported estimates were as high as £1 billion).[9]
The first Heathrow attack was carried out on 9 March at 6.00 pm. In this attack the IRA fired five Mark-6 mortar rounds into the grounds of Heathrow Airport from a parked car. None of these exploded, and a search by security officers found no signs of further trouble. The Queen was due to arrive at Heathrow the next day being flown by the RAF. Despite being given a one-hour warning that bombs would explode at the airport, police did not close Heathrow's northern runway even after it was targeted by mortar bombs. A British Airways airliner to Copenhagen used the runway two minutes before the attack was launched from the car park of the Forte Excelsior Hotel, about 400 meters (440 yd) away, at 5.57 pm.
The second of the three attacks was carried out on 11 March when the IRA launched a further four mortar rounds from a wooded area. The projectiles again did not explode. The Queen's plane landed while a further search was under way.
In the third and final attack on 13 March, with mortars that again failed to explode landing inside the airport grounds. They had been buried and the launch tubes were missed in previous searches. The airport was closed for two hours afterwards. In a statement issued later that day, the IRA stated their "positive and flexible" attitude to the peace process was "abiding and enduring".[10][11]
According to one of the men involved in the attacks, the mortars were designed not to explode: the attack was a "purely symbolic" protest against the renewal of thePrevention of Terrorism Act.[12]
No one was injured in the attacks using what the police called 'home made' devices, but flights were disrupted and Terminal One was closed as bomb disposal experts searched for any remaining devices after each attack.[11]
The shelling of Heathrow was apparently intended to put pressure on the British government to go beyond theDowning Street Declaration. IrishTaioseachAlbert Reynolds dubbed the attacks as "political naive", regarding the presumed IRA goal of extracting more concessions. The IRA and Sinn Féin wanted an unequivocal signal from Britain that they would open the way to full scale negotiations, with a defined time span and an open agenda.[13]
In 1998 Michael Gallagher, who had provided the attackers with transportation and rented the garage where the explosives were prepared, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for conspiracy to cause explosions.[14] Gallagher was released from prison in 2000 under theGood Friday Agreement and later published a memoir,Unbroken: Secrets, Lies and Enduring Love, which detailed his role in the attacks.[12]
This was the last major attack in Britain before the IRA's 1994 ceasefire and until the1996 Docklands bombing, which ended it.[15]