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Northern Ireland’s Adams Tells UK Court He Was Never in IRA in Civil Trial Over Bombings

LONDON, March 17 (Reuters) – Gerry Adams, one of ⁠Northern ⁠Ireland’s best-known political figures, ⁠once again denied ever being a member of the ​paramilitary Irish Republican Army as he gave evidence on Tuesday at London’s High ‌Court.

The former leader of Sinn ‌Fein, formerly the IRA’s political wing and now the largest party ⁠in the ⁠Northern Irish Assembly, is fighting a civil lawsuit which aims ​to hold him liable for three bombings in Britain in the 1970s and 1990s.

Adams has long faced accusations that he was a member of the Provisional ​IRA (PIRA), including from former members of the paramilitary group, which he has ⁠always ⁠denied.

The 77-year-old entered the ⁠witness box ​on Tuesday and wished “a very happy St Patrick’s Day” to the judge, ​before he was questioned ⁠by his lawyer Edward Craven about how he joined Sinn Fein in 1964, when it was banned.

He is being sued by three people 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. They are seeking a finding on the balance of probabilities that Adams is personally liable as a senior member of the PIRA.

But Adams said in his written witness statement: “I was never a member of the IRA or its Army Council. … I have never held any rank or role within the IRA, including on the IRA’s Army Council.

“I have never held a ‘command-and-control ⁠role’ in the IRA and have never been a senior, let alone most senior figure, in the IRA.”

Adams became Sinn Fein leader in 1983, establishing himself as the best-known face of the movement ​seeking to end British rule in Northern Ireland.

(Reporting by ​Sam Tobin, Editing by William Maclean)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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