Northern Ireland’s Adams in UK court for civil trial over IRA bombings

Former Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams speaks to media outside the High Court, after winning a legal action against the BBC, in Dublin, Ireland, May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Former Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams appeared at London’s High Court on Monday ‌for a civil lawsuit which aims to hold him liable for Irish Republican Army bombings in Britain, a case which could affect the prominent republican leader’s legacy.
Adams became Sinn Fein leader in 1983 when it was the IRA’s political wing, establishing himself as the best-known face of the movement seeking to ​end British rule in Northern Ireland.

He later reinvented himself as a peacemaker after helping secure the 1998 Good Friday ​Agreement, which largely ended three decades of sectarian conflict, known as the Troubles, in which some 3,600 people ⁠were killed.
Adams has always denied being a member of the Provisional IRA (PIRA), though he has long faced accusations – including from members ​of the paramilitary group – that he was involved in its campaign of killings.
The 77-year-old is now being sued by some of those ​injured in three bombings: one at London’s Old Bailey court in 1973, the PIRA’s first on the British mainland, and two 1996 blasts, targeting London’s Docklands and Manchester.

The three claimants are seeking a nominal 1 pound ($1.33) in damages and a finding that, on the balance of probabilities, Adams was a senior ​member of the IRA.
Adams’ lawyers argued in court documents that there was “no credible evidence to support the claimants’ allegation that (Adams) was a ​senior member of the PIRA”.

ADAMS SAYS PIRA SUPPORT IS NOT MEMBERSHIP

The claimants’ lawyer Anne Studd said on Monday that Adams was “so intrinsically involved in the ‌PIRA ⁠organisation that he is as culpable for the assaults… as the individuals who planted and detonated the bombs”.
She cited Adams’ attendance at high-level meetings with the British government in the early 1970s as supporting evidence, though Adams says he was there as a Sinn Fein representative.
Studd also said Dolours Price, one of nine people convicted over the Old Bailey bombing, previously accused Adams of involvement in the ​bombing campaign in Britain.

But Adams’ lawyers ​said Price, who died ⁠in 2013, was motivated by a desire for revenge against Adams, whom she believed had betrayed the republican cause through his involvement in the peace process.
They added that Adams had expressed support for ​supporters or members of the PIRA and its campaign, but that did not mean he ​was a member or “come ⁠close to constituting evidence that (Adams) was responsible for the three bombings”.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/northern-irelands-adams-uk-court-civil-trial-over-ira-bombings-2026-03-09/

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