British Army observation post Divis Tower was a flashpoint area during the height of the Troubles. A stronghold of the
Irish Republican Socialist Party and
Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), the building was referred to as the "Planet of the Irps" (in reference to the film
Planet of the Apes; IRSP supporters are referred to as "Irps") In response to
Provisional IRA and INLA activity in the area, the British Army constructed an observation post on the roof in the 1970s and occupied the top two floors of the building. At the height of
the Troubles, the Army was only able to access the post by
helicopter.
Shootings On 15 August 1969, nine-year-old Patrick Rooney, the first child killed in the Troubles, was killed in the tower during the
1969 riots, when the
Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) fired a
Browning machine gun from a
Shorland armoured car into the flats. The RUC claimed that it was coming under
sniper attack from the tower at the time. Rooney's death occurred during a day of street violence in the area. Chairman of the enquiry into the riots
Mr Justice Scarman found the use of the Browning machine gun "wholly unjustifiable". On 17 April 1972, soldiers of the
Parachute Regiment shot dead an 86-year-old civilian Patrick Donaghy through the window in his home in Divis flats, killing him instantly. Patrick Donaghy was one of the oldest victims of the entire conflict and the oldest victim killed by the security forces. On 25 February 1975,
Official IRA operations officer Sean Fox was shot dead by the INLA on Cullingtree Row within the flats complex as part of a feud. On 12 May 1981, a British Army sniper killed INLA member Emmanuel McClarnon from the top of Divis Tower, on the night that
Francis Hughes died on
hunger strike. On 26 June 1981, a 29-year-old civilian named Vincent Robinson was found shot dead at the Divis Flats. The Provisional IRA carried out the killing claiming he was an
informer after he was picked up by the RUC at his
Andersonstown home on 17 June. It was later suspected that the killing was orchestrated to protect the identity of a British agent known as "
Stakeknife" and is being re-investigated as part of
Operation Kenova. On 24 July 1981, a 36-year old Catholic civilian, Peter Doherty, was shot in the head with a
rubber bullet by a
Royal Marines Commando. Doherty died in the
Royal Victoria Hospital a week later on 31 July.
INLA 1982 bombing In September 1982, an INLA unit detonated a bomb hidden in a drainpipe along a balcony, killing British soldier Kevin Waller, who was aged 20, and two boys, Stephen Bennet (aged 14) and Kevin Valliday (aged 12); three other civilians and another soldier were injured in the blast.
Dismantling of the post Following the IRA's statement that it was ending its armed campaign, the Army decided to dismantle the observation post, dubbed a 'spy' post by
Sinn Féin. Removal of the observation post commenced on 2 August 2005. In 2009, the top two floors of the tower were reinstated as residential properties. As part of a £1.1 million refurbishment programme by the
Northern Ireland Housing Executive, eight extra flats were provided. ==References==