Anti-British Group Says It Killed a Retired Policeman in N. Ireland


Anti-British Group Says It Killed a Retired Policeman in N. Ireland

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BELFAST, Northern Ireland — An anti-British gang opposed to Northern Ireland’s peace talks claimed responsibility Saturday for the shooting death of a retired policeman. It made no attempt


to justify the killing.


In a statement to the BBC in this city, the outlawed Irish National Liberation Army said it had killed Cyril Stewart, 52, who retired last year after suffering a heart attack.


The INLA gave no explanation for Friday’s shooting outside a supermarket in Armagh, 40 miles southwest of here. Critics said it was the latest effort by extremists to cause peace talks to


unravel.


The talks among eight parties resume Monday. They face an April 9 deadline to reach a settlement acceptable to the north’s pro-British Protestant majority, which wants strong government


within Northern Ireland, and to a substantial Catholic minority determined to build ties with the rest of Ireland.


The British and Irish prime ministers, Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern, discussed the prospects for reaching a compromise in a 20-minute telephone conversation. Later, Blair’s spokesman said the


British leader would meet with several Northern Ireland party leaders in London.


The INLA, a maverick critic of the larger Irish Republican Army that shares its aim of ending British rule, opposes the IRA’s current truce on the grounds that the talks are unlikely to


sever Northern Ireland’s links with Britain.