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Shooting linked to a republican feud

Julian O’Neill

BBC NI crime and justice correspondent

Pacemaker Two men in hazmat suits peer into a white taxi. There is a police cordon saying, 'do not cross on it' Pacemaker

The scene of the shooting in Dunmurry was examined by forensic investigators

The man critically wounded in a shooting in west Belfast at the weekend is thought to have been the victim of a republican feud.

It happened in Bell Steel Manor in Dunmurry at about 10:30 GMT on Sunday.

Republican Network for Unity, a political party with links to the dissident organisation Óglaigh na hÉireann (OnH) has said the man is one of its members.

OnH has been linked to a number of gun murders in Belfast in recent years, and there was a split within the group last year.

Police patrols are believed to have been increased amid fears of further violence.

Kids training ’30 yards away’

At the scene: Kelly Bonner, BBC News NI in Dunmurry

Police are still at the scene.

A cordon is in place outside the shop where the shooting took place.

School children and their parents have had to find an alternative route to St Kieran’s Primary School which is next to where the shooting took place.

One local woman told me she was “fuming” that this happened in her area.

She said “about a 100 kids were training 30 yards from where we’re standing”.

“That’s unacceptable. No one wants this,” she added.

DAnny Baker wearing a dark coloured shirt, standing at the side of a street. He has short dark hair and in the background can be seen a cordoned green area.

Sinn Féin’s Danny Baker says “there’s no place” for paramilitary gangs

Sinn Féin MLA Danny Baker said there was no “justification for any groups of paramilitary gangs,” adding that they did not have support in the community.

“This is a brilliant, vibrant community and they don’t want anything like this happening,” he told Good Morning Ulster.

“People have called on these groups, and do not want these groups on our backs. They want them out of our communities, they want them disbanded.

“There’s no place for them,” he said.

Peter McReynolds wearing a green polo shirt. Behind him are shrubs and flowers, and a blue wooden fence.

The Alliance Party’s Peter McReynolds sits on the Northern Ireland Policing Board

The Alliance Party’s Peter McReynolds, who sits on the Northern Ireland Policing Board, told the Nolan Show: “What we can do is work with the police, support the police, and keep the police informed to make sure that these people are brought to justice”.

“I think over the past few years the police have done really good work through the paramilitary task force that was set up”.


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