Guns, bombs, bullets found after fire in boiler house belonged to New IRA - police

Police believe AK47s may have been used in two separate dissident attacks on officers in Belfast

AK 47 assault riffles seized. Photograph: PSNI
AK 47 assault riffles seized. Photograph: PSNI

A dissident republican weapons haul containing guns potentially used in police murder bids has been discovered in a residential boiler house that caught fire in Belfast.

Two AK47 assault rifles, two sawn-off shotguns, a high-powered rifle with a silencer fitted, three pipe bombs and more than 100 assorted rounds of ammunition were stored in the building that went on fire on Rodney Drive in west Belfast earlier this week.

Police believe the weapons belonged to the so-called New IRA and may have been stored in the outhouse without the knowledge of the resident of the home.

Sawn off shot guns which were part of the weapons haul. Photograph: PSNI/PA Wire
Sawn off shot guns which were part of the weapons haul. Photograph: PSNI/PA Wire

Detective Superintendent John McVea, from the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s terrorism investigation unit, said: “We firmly believe these weapons belong to the New IRA.”

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The guns, bombs and bullets were stored on top of an operating domestic boiler and officers believe the blaze may have been triggered when one ignited due to the heat.

Rounds of ammunition which were discovered in a residential boiler house that caught fire in Belfast.  Photograph: PSNI
Rounds of ammunition which were discovered in a residential boiler house that caught fire in Belfast. Photograph: PSNI

“It beggars belief that anyone would store items as volatile as bombs and bullets in a hot environment,” said Mr McVea.

“This is simply reckless, it is stupid and it shows total disregard for the safety of local residents.

“Anyone with an ounce of sense would have known that live ammunition and pipe bombs mixed with heat is a recipe for carnage.”

Detective Superintendent John McVea, from the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s terrorism investigation unit, briefing the media at PSNI HQ in Belfast about a new IRA weapons haul. Photograph: David Young/PA
Detective Superintendent John McVea, from the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s terrorism investigation unit, briefing the media at PSNI HQ in Belfast about a new IRA weapons haul. Photograph: David Young/PA

Police believe the AK47s may have been used in two separate dissident attacks on police - one in the Rossnareen Avenue area of west Belfast in November 2015 and the other on a garage forecourt on the Crumlin Road in north Belfast in January 2017.

In the first attack, a police car patrolling Rossnareen Avenue was riddled with up to eight bullets.

Riffle magazines seized as part of the weapons haul. Photograph: PSNI
Riffle magazines seized as part of the weapons haul. Photograph: PSNI

Armoured plating and bulletproof glass was credited with saving the lives of the two officers inside the vehicle when they were ambushed.

Shot three times

In the second attack, a policeman survived despite being shot three times in the arm when gunmen opened fire on him as he got out of a parked police car at the Crumlin Road garage.

Officers said it was a miracle no members of the public were also shot as bullets flew across the busy petrol station forecourt.

Weapons on top of the boiler. Photograph: PSNI
Weapons on top of the boiler. Photograph: PSNI

On Friday, Mr McVea said: “The Crumlin Road shooting in particular was reckless and showed total disregard for members of the public as bullets entered the filling station shop, narrowly missing customers and passing motorists.”

The detective said he believed the weapons were moved into the boiler house on Monday evening after 9pm. They were found on Wednesday.

He urged anyone who saw anything suspicious in the alleyway behind Rodney Drive to come forward.

Rounds of ammunition which were discovered. Photograph: PSNI
Rounds of ammunition which were discovered. Photograph: PSNI

“We are lucky there hasn’t been significant injury as the fire developed,” he said.

Mr McVea said the violent renegades who owned the weapons were “beneath contempt”.

“I am asking the community to stand up against these parasites,” he added.

Mr McVea said it was possible the resident of the property was unaware and had been “exploited” by the terrorists.

The detective said a neighbour first reported the fire, with the occupant of the house then also calling the emergency services to alert them to the blaze.

A 35-year-old man who was arrested under the Terrorism Act on Wednesday was subsequently released unconditionally.

Mr McVea said the cause of the blaze was still under investigation but said it was possible one of the illegal items stored on top of the boiler had sparked it.

“It is no surprise to me that when you store pipe bombs and ammunition on top of a hot boiler, that is just a recipe for carnage, so that might well be the cause (of the fire), but that’s still under investigation,” he said.

The investigating officer declined to be drawn on the suggestion the weapons had been moved ahead of another planned attack on police.

“The one thing I am pleased about is that these weapons are no longer in the hands of the terrorists and they have been put beyond use,” he said.

He added: “It’s a significant haul of weapons in today’s terms within terrorism and it is with pleasure that these weapons are no longer in the hands of these terrorists.”

Mr McVea said the New IRA still posed a “severe threat” despite the weapons seizure.

- PA