ANFO was used in 1970 when protests by students became violent at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison, who learned how to make and use ANFO from a Wisconsin Conservation Department booklet entitled
Pothole Blasting for Wildlife, resulting in the
Sterling Hall bombing. ANFO used to be widely used by the FLNC (
National Liberation Front of Corsica), along with f15 explosive. Five containers of each were used to blow up the Tax Office building in Bastia on 28 February 1987. The ANFO
car bomb was adopted by the
Provisional IRA in 1972 and, by 1973,
the Troubles were consuming of ammonium nitrate for the majority of bombs. The
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) also made use of ANFO bombs, often mixing in
gelignite as a booster, in the
Dublin and Monaghan bombings of May 1974 which killed 34 people & injured almost 300, ANFO car bombs were used in Dublin. It has also seen use by groups such as the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and
ETA. In 1992,
Shining Path perpetrated the
Tarata bombing in
Lima, Peru, using two ANFO truck bombs. The
Shijiazhuang bombings rocked the city of Shijiazhuang, China, on 16 March 2001. A total of 108 people were killed, and 38 others injured when, within a short time, several ANFO bombs exploded near four apartment buildings. In November 2009, the government of the
North West Frontier Province (NWFP) of
Pakistan imposed a ban on
ammonium sulfate, ammonium nitrate, and
calcium ammonium nitrate fertilizers in the
Upper Dir,
Lower Dir,
Swat,
Chitral and
Malakand districts (the former
Malakand Division) following reports that those chemicals were used by militants to make explosives. In April 2010, police in Greece confiscated 180 kg of ANFO and other related material stashed in a hideaway in the Athens suburb of Kareas. The material was believed to be linked to attacks previously carried out by the "Revolutionary Struggle" terrorist group. In January 2010, President
Hamid Karzai of
Afghanistan also issued a decree banning the use, production, storage, purchase, or sale of ammonium nitrate, after an investigation showed militants in the
Taliban insurgency had used the substance in bomb attacks. On 22 July 2011, an aluminium powder-enriched ANNM explosive, with total size of 950 kg (150 kg of aluminium powder), increasing demolition power by 10–30% over plain ANFO, was used in the
Oslo bombing. On 13 April 2016, two suspected
IRA members were stopped in Dublin with 67 kg of ANFO. On 6 March 2018, 8 members of the extreme right
neo-Nazi group
Combat 18 were arrested in Athens, Greece, accused of multiple attacks on immigrants and activists. They had 50 kg of ANFO in their possession. == References ==