
Kieran orCiarán Fleming (25 October 1959 – 2 December 1984), was avolunteer in the 4th Battalion,Derry Brigade of theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) from theWaterside area ofDerry,Northern Ireland.[1] He died while attempting to escape after a confrontation with British troops in 1984.[2][3][4]
Fleming was the youngest son of Paddy and Maud Fleming and grew up in the waterside area ofDerry.[5][6]
Fleming became involved in theIrish republican movement from an early age and spent most of his formative years imprisoned in the republican H-Blocks ofHMP Maze. He was convicted of themurder ofRoyal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officer Linda Baggley in 1976 and imprisoned.[7]
On 23 September 1983, Fleming was involved in theMaze Prison escape, the largest break-out of prisoners in Europe sinceWorld War II and in British prison history. Fleming, along with 37 other republican prisoners, armed with 6 hand-guns, hijacked a prison meals lorry and smashed their way out of HMP Maze past 40 prison wardens and 28 alarm systems. During the escapeGerry Kelly shot and injured a prison warden as the officer attempted to foil the escape.[6][8][9]
Fleming, according to IRA sources quoted by journalistEd Moloney was noted for his hard line militarist republicanism.[10] He is reputed to have backed a plan to form full-time guerilla units orflying columns based in the Republic, which would carry out four or five large scale attacks in the north a year. This approach was espoused by the militantProvisional IRA East Tyrone Brigade led byPadraig McKearney andJim Lynagh, who wanted an escalation of the conflict to what they termed "total war". They were opposed byKevin McKenna, the IRA Chief of Staff and by the republican leadership headed byGerry Adams, on the grounds that actions on that scale were too big a risk and unsustainable. The IRA leadership wanted a smaller scale campaign of attrition, supplemented by political campaigning bySinn Féin.[11][12]
On Sunday morning, 2 December 1984, Fleming andAntoine Mac Giolla Bhrighde stole a Toyota van inPettigo,County Donegal. The van was then loaded with nine beer kegs, each containing 100 lb of explosives.[13] They then crossed the border and travelled toKesh, County Fermanagh. At the Drumrush Lodge Restaurant just outside Kesh they then planted a landmine in a lane leading to the restaurant and wired up a device which was connected to an observation point. From there a hoax call was made in order to lure the British Army to the restaurant on the pretense that there was a firebomb planted within the restaurant.
MacGiolla Bhrighde observed a RUC patrol car approaching the restaurant and gave the detonation code word "one". However, the mine failed to explode. MacGiolla Bhrighde and British Army soldierAlistair Slater were both killed during the operation.[6][14][15] Fleming and the remainder of theASU then came under fire from theSAS unit and retreated. Fleming, unable to swim, became trapped between the SAS units and the swollen River Bannagh and was swept away and drowned.[16]
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Trouble erupted at the funeral of Fleming.[17] Mourners were baton-charged by the police, who were determined not to allow any paramilitary displays. The RUC fired plastic bullets as a riot ensued and Fleming’s coffin was maneuvered through the streets into the Bogside, then to the cemetery “where Martin [McGuinness], an IRA firing party and others were waiting.”[18]
In 2002, a row erupted when a monument to Fleming, MacGiolla Bhrighde and Sligo VolunteerJoe MacManus was sited close to the place where Protestant workmen William Hassard and Frederick Love were killed by the IRA in 1988.[19][20][21]