Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Orange Cross Social Club shooting

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Attack type
  
Mass shooting

Total number of deaths
  
1

Date
  
16 February 1989

Orange Cross Social Club shooting

Location
  
Craven Street, Shankill Road, Belfast

Target
  
Ulster loyalist paramilitaries and civilians

Non-fatal injuries
  
1 UDR soldier, unknown number of civilians

Perpetrator
  
Irish People's Liberation Organisation

On 16 February 1989, three IPLO volunteers walked into the Orange Cross social club on the Shankill Road, Belfast. They ordered the patrons into one room and then shot at them, killing one.

Contents

IPLO

The Irish People's Liberation Organization (IPLO) began as a breakaway faction from the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), who they feuded with for much of 1986-87. The IPLO was a small but very violent Irish republican paramilitary organisation which was formed in 1986 by disaffected and expelled members of the INLA, whose factions coalesced in the aftermath of the supergrass trials. It developed a reputation for intra-republican and sectarian violence, and criminality.

The shooting

At around 13:15, somebody pressed the security buzzer on the Orange Cross Social Club's door to seek admission to the Club and a female employee at the club went to open the door. As the door opened, three gunmen from the IPLO entered and ordered the men in the room to stand at the bar. They pretended it was a robbery at first to better ensure compliance, then one of the IPLO gunmen started firing from a indiscriminately at the customers with a Uzi sub-machine gun. Stephen McCrea, a Red Hand Commando member, was fatally wounded. The IPLO claimed McCrea was an informer working for the British security forces. One of his work-mates described the scene.

"I stood in line whenever the first shot was fired and all of a sudden Stevie McCrea dived in front of me. The shots rang out and we all hit the floor. By this time the gunmen had run out of the room and we all stood up again. That is, except for two other men and Stevie McCrea. He had saved my life alright but lost his own in doing so’.

But according to Jack Holland and Henry McDonald's book I.N.L.A - Deadly Divisions the IPLO missed a golden chance to wipe out the whole UVF leadership (or most of it) which would have made the IPLO heroes with hardline Republicans & would have given them a respectable standing in the Nationalist community who turned a blind eye to Republican operations. While the shooting was going on downstairs in the bar The UVF Brigade Staff was holding a meeting upstairs when the IPLO unit burst in.

Aftermath

The IPLO quickly claimed responsibility for the attack. The security forces had been fearing a republican backlash for the number of Catholic civilians killed in the previous weeks. The IPLO claimed it was a retaliation attack for two Catholic civilians and a Sinn Féin councillor killed during the same week.

News Report

ITN news report of the shooting.


References

Orange Cross Social Club shooting Wikipedia