26 November 1972: Dramatic and bloody events occurred in the City of Dublin on this day: A Bombing was carried out on a crowded City Centre cinema. There was also the arrest and imprisonment for contempt of Court of one Kevin O’Kelly, a well known RTE journalist, plus an unsuccessful attempt by the IRA to rescue one of their top men, Seán Mac Stiofáin [above], from the Mater Hospital in the north inner City.
At 1.25 a.m. a bomb exploded in a laneway
connecting Burgh Quay to Leinster Market. It was placed beside the rear exit
door of the Film Centre cinema, O’Connell Bridge House. A late film was in
progress: there were 3 staff and approximately 156 patrons in the cinema at the
time of the explosion. No one was killed in the blast, but some 40 people were
taken to hospital for treatment. It is believed that agent provocateurs
sent over from Britain were responsible for this attack.
The events leading to O’Kelly and Mac
Stiofáin’s arrests had begun on Sunday 19 November when RTE Radio broadcast a
report based on an interview by Kevin O'Kelly with the IRA Chief of Staff, Seán
Mac Stiofáin. The leading Republican figure had been apprehended soon
afterwards and brought before the Courts. O'Kelly was found guilty of contempt
of Court when, during the conduct of the trial of Mac Stiofáin, he refused to
identify the defendant as the subject of that interview.
The IRA Leader had embarked upon a Hunger Strike soon after he was
arrested. He was convicted of being ‘a
member of an unlawful organisation’ and as his condition was deteriorating he
was sent to the Mater Hospital where he was to be placed under observation.
That Sunday afternoon a crowd of about seven thousand people had gathered
outside the GPO and marched to the hospital to demand his release.
Later that
night a rescue party of eight IRA men, two disguised as Priests and the others
as Hospital Doctors tried to free Mac Stiofáin but were themselves captured. Two of the men had
guns, and shots were exchanged with Special Branch detectives, resulting in
minor injuries to a detective, two civilians and one of the raiders. The Prisoner was then transferred by helicopter to the Curragh General
Military Hospital to serve the rest of his six month
sentence while his erstwhile rescuers were each sent down for seven years for
their audacity when they in turn faced the Courts.
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