The Paddington station bomb went off at 4:20am. There were no deaths or injuries, but the roof was badly damaged. The bomb at Paddington was designed to establish credibility for a subsequent IRA call warning that bombs would explode at all 11 mainline stations in London during the morning rush hour. The IRA intended that the security services would take the warning seriously and not treat it as a hoax. Given that an evacuation of this magnitude was unprecedented, the police hesitated before halting all incoming trains and evacuating every station, which would have put thousands of people on the streets, which may have been the location of secondary devices. Sometime before 7:00am, a caller with an Irish accent said: "We are the Irish Republican Army. Bombs to go off in all mainline stations in 45 minutes." Before ordering a massive evacuation, the authorities tried to search the stations. As a result, The Victoria station bomb, which was hidden in a rubbish bin inside the station, went off at 7:40am whilst passengers were still present on crowded platforms. This was the worst attack suffered by civilians in England at the hands of the IRA since the
1983 Harrods bombing, which killed three policemen, three civilians and injured 50 people. Fearing further casualties, for the first time in history, all London's rail terminals were closed, disrupting the journeys of almost half a million commuters and bringing chaos to London, which was the IRA's intended goal. There was also a hoax call made to
Heathrow, causing the airport's closure. That night the IRA claimed responsibility for the bombings but blamed the British police for the casualties. A statement from the IRA GHQ said: "The cynical decision of senior security personnel not to evacuate railway stations named in secondary warnings, even three hours after the warning device had exploded at Paddington in the early hours of this morning was directly responsible for the casualties at Victoria." The statement went on, "All future warnings should be acted upon." Police defended the decision not to close all stations after receiving warning that bombs had been planted. Commander George Churchill-Coleman, head of
Scotland Yard's
anti-terrorist squad, said that dozens of hoax calls were received every day. "It is very easy with hindsight to be critical." Churchill-Coleman also said that the bomb was "quite deliberately intended to maim and kill." ==Aftermath==