1971 Newry killings
The 1971 Newry killings was an incident during the Troubles in Newry, Northern Ireland where undercover British Army soldiers shot and killed three Catholic civilians in disputed circumstances on 23 October 1971. Four Royal Green Jackets soldiers were stationed in the town's Woolworths department store after the army had received a tip-off that the Provincial Bank across the street would be the target of a bank robbery by the Provisional [Irish Republican Army].
Three men, Sean Ruddy, Robert Anderson and Thomas McLoughlin were spotted approaching the bank and after becoming involved in an altercation with two men depositing money were shouted at to stop by the soldiers. All three began running away and were subsequently shot and killed by the soldiers. After the killings, the soldiers involved were tried in a civil proceeding; a jury found the soldiers not guilty of murder. After news of the killings became public, angered mobs rioted in Newry for several days until security forces managed to bring the situation back under control.
Background
, also known as the "Northern Ireland conflict", were an ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland that lasted about 30 years from the late 1960s to 1998; it resulted from tensions between Irish Catholics and Ulster Protestants in the region. After the Battle of the Bogside and the 1969 [Northern Ireland riots], the British Army was deployed to the region as part of Operation Banner, an effort by the government of [the United Kingdom] to provide military aid to the civil authorities.Initially, Irish Catholics in Northern Ireland viewed the British Army as a welcome alternative to the predominantly-Protestant Royal Ulster Constabulary. However, tensions soon increased as the army was viewed by the Catholic community as favouring Protestants, a fact which was exploited by Irish republican paramilitary organisations, most prominently the Provisional Irish Republican Army in their campaign to reunite Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland. By the early 1970s, tension and violence in Northern Ireland had rapidly increased, particularly in the wake of the ongoing political instability of the Stormont government.