IRA ‘tried to control road haulage for protection money’

The IRA were determined to gain control of an increase in haulage business between the Republic and Northern Ireland, in a bid to extort protection money, declassified state papers show.
File photograph of a customs post on the southern side of the Irish border . Declassified state papers show that the IRA were determined to gain control of an increase in haulage business between the Republic and Northern Ireland, in a bid to extort protection money.File photograph of a customs post on the southern side of the Irish border . Declassified state papers show that the IRA were determined to gain control of an increase in haulage business between the Republic and Northern Ireland, in a bid to extort protection money.
File photograph of a customs post on the southern side of the Irish border . Declassified state papers show that the IRA were determined to gain control of an increase in haulage business between the Republic and Northern Ireland, in a bid to extort protection money.

Irish officials were told that an increase in haulage traffic across the border would provide opportunities for republican paramilitaries through the lapse of official customs controls.

The concerns were raised in 1989, some three years before the free movement of people and traffic between European member states came into effect.

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It came after the Provisional IRA repeatedly bombed the Dublin/Belfast railway line, which caused constant disruption.

In 1989 British Embassy officials contacted the Irish Government to make them aware that the US State Department was issuing travel advice concerning the Dublin/Belfast railway.

Ireland’s ambassador to the US expressed concern about the advice.

In a public notice, the US state department told American tourists that travellers to Northern Ireland should be aware of the frequent bomb threats and disruption to the rail service.

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In a briefing from foreign affairs official Declan O’Donovan about the railway bombing campaign, Mr O’Donovan said Irish officials had spoken to the office of then SDLP MP Seamus Mallon about the matter.

The “local guess”, officials were told, was that the IRA campaign against the line was connected with road haulage.

Mr O’Donovan added: “There is a brief that the effect of 1992 will be to cut IRA revenue from smuggling, increase haulage traffic and provide opportunities for the IRA through the lapse of official (customs) controls.

“It is not thought that hauliers are paying the IRA to close the line, but rather that the IRA itself, or a section of it, is determined to get control of the increasing North/South haulage business before 1992.”

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It was understood that the IRA wanted direct or indirect commercial control of some haulage companies, as well as the extortion of protection money from others, officials said.

In March 1989, Irish official Sean O’Huiginn was told by the then joint British secretary that the railway had a greater symbolic value than the electricity inter-connector.

In a confidential note, Mr O’Huiginn added: “The Provisionals undoubtedly would make tremendous propaganda capital out of the authorities inability to defend it.”

British officials wanted the Irish Government to issue a statement drawing attention to the inconvenience to passengers, and highlighting the “topsy turvy logic” of the Provisionals, who protested against border closures and then “disrupted such an important North/South link”.

“The persistent pattern seemed to show the Provos were determined to attack the line in any case, so that we were less concerned at this aspect,” Mr O’Huiginn continued.