|
Source
|
Captions by Associated Press | |
A Garda officer stands outside the isolated home of Denis Donaldson, the former Sinn Fein member who spied for Britain, and who was murdered Tuesday, near Glenties, Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The killing of Donaldson has undermined the British and Irish governments' planned publication Thursday of a blueprint for resurrecting a Protestant-Catholic administration, the central pillar of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord.(AP Photo) |
A Garda officer stands outside the isolated home of Denis Donaldson, the former Sinn Fein member who spied for Britain, and who was murdered Tuesday, near Glenties, Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The killing of Donaldson has undermined the British and Irish governments' planned publication Thursday of a blueprint for resurrecting a Protestant-Catholic administration, the central pillar of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord. (AP Photo) |
A Garda search team comb the area near to the where Denis Donaldson, a former Sinn Fein official recently exposed as a British spy, was found murdered in the Glenties hills in Ireland, Thursday April 6, 2006. The assassination of a Sinn Fein official who had admitted spying for the British will make a new power-sharing deal in Northern Ireland more difficult, Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern told lawmakers. Despite this, Ahern said he and British Prime Minister Tony Blair would reveal a long-awaited new plan Thursday in Armagh, Northern Ireland, that aims to forge a Catholic-Protestant administration led by leaders of Sinn Fein, the IRA-linked party, and their bitter Protestant rivals from the Democratic Unionist Party. (AP Photo/Paul Faith/PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE |
British Prime Minster Tony Blair, left, and Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern speak to the media at a press conference in the Navan Centre, Armagh, Northern Ireland Thursday, April, 6, 2006. The British and Irish prime ministers, Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern, declared Thursday that Northern Ireland's legislature will be reconvened May 15 in what was called a final push to revive power-sharing between Protestants and Catholics. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison) |
A Garda officer stands outside the isolated home of Denis Donaldson, the former Sinn Fein member who spied for Britain, and who was murdered Tuesday, near Glenties, Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The killing of Donaldson has undermined the British and Irish governments' planned publication Thursday of a blueprint for resurrecting a Protestant-Catholic administration, the central pillar of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord.(AP Photo) |
A Garda officer stands outside the isolated home of Denis Donaldson, the former Sinn Fein member who spied for Britain, and who was murdered Tuesday, near Glenties, Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The killing of Donaldson has undermined the British and Irish governments' planned publication Thursday of a blueprint for resurrecting a Protestant-Catholic administration, the central pillar of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord.(AP Photo) |
A Garda officer patrols the road outside the isolated home of Denis Donaldson, the former Sinn Fein member who spied for Britain, and who was murdered Tuesday, near Glenties, Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The killing of Donaldson has undermined the British and Irish governments' planned publication Thursday of a blueprint for resurrecting a Protestant-Catholic administration, the central pillar of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord.(AP Photo) |
The hearse carrying the body of former Sinn Fein official and British spy Denis Donaldson is taken from the remote area outside Glenties, County Donegal, in the Irish Republic, Wednesday April 5, 2006. The assassination of a Sinn Fein official who had admitted spying for the British will make a new power-sharing deal in Northern Ireland more difficult, Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern told lawmakers Wednesday. (AP Photo/ Paul Faith, PA) |
A Royal Air Force Puma helicopter helps remove a British Army watchtower on Jonesborough Hill in South Armagh, Northern Ireland, Monday, April, 3, 2006. The British army began dismantling its last five watchtowers along the Northern Ireland border Monday, a long-awaited move in response to the Irish Republican Army's decision last year to disarm. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)> |
Garda police officers at the scene Denis Donaldson was found murdered near Glenties, Donegal, Republic of Ireland, Wednesday, April, 5, 2006. The former member of Sinn Fein who has admitted spying for the British authorities was shot dead in his home. Donaldson admited on Irish television in December 2005, that he had spied on his colleagues in the republican movement for the past two decades, then fled to Glenties to hide-out , but today police are searching for his murderer. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison) |
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams, second right, and party colleague Martin McGuinness, right, speak to the press after their meeting with Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain at Stormont Castle, Belfast, Monday Dec. 19, 2005. Hain, Britain's minister responsible for governing Northern Ireland, rejected appeals Monday for a fact-finding probe into the spying scandal that wrecked the province's Catholic-Protestant administration. All Northern Ireland political parties have demanded a probe into the scandal and the central role of a former senior Sinn Fein official, Denis Donaldson. (AP Photo/Paul Faith, PA) |
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams speaks to the media at Parliament Buildings, Stormont, Belfast, Northern Ireland, Tuesday, April, 4, 2006. The Sinn Fein PResident was giving details of the planned commemorations to the 1916 Easter Rising which formed the Irish Republic. Further south, across the border, in the Republic of Ireland, former Sinn Fein party officer Denis Donaldson was found shot dead in Co Donegal, according to police sources Tuesday, April 4, 2006. (AP Photo / Peter Morrison) |
An undated file photo shows Denis Donaldson (L) the former Sinn Fein party member pictured in Long Kesh (HM Prison Maze) with Bobby Sands in an iconic image used around the world, after Sands died on the IRA Hunger Strike in the Maze prison in 1981. Sinn Fein has revealed that Denis Donaldson, a highly ranked member of the party in Belfast, was expelled after it was uncovered that he had been working as a British agent. EPA/- UK IRELAND OUT Source |
News 4 October 2002. Sinn Fein head of administration Denis Donaldson was arrested. Source |