Northern Ireland police defuse bomb near the headquarters of the Group of Eight meeting



Police stripped Northern Ireland on Saturday, defusing a bomb placed in a car near the venue of a summit of the Group of Eight leaders scheduled to be held in June and said it was likely to be the bomb targeted a police station located in close proximity.

And disarm explosives experts in the army defuse the bomb after a security operation that lasted for nearly 36 hours in the town of Faramanah city Anescaln.

The Group of Eight leaders will meet in a building on the outskirts of the town immediately after three months.

A senior officer in the Northern Ireland police The police believe that the bomb was placed on the road leading to the police station in a nearby town and it would have led to death or injury of many, if not deactivated.

And ended the peace deal in 1998 violence continued for more than three decades in the territory under the control of Britain between mostly Catholic nationalists seeking union with Ireland and between federal and most Protestants want the region to remain part of Britain.

But militant nationalists Admon members dissented from the Irish Republican Army (IRA) after it announced a cease-fire still waging sporadic attacks with weapons and bombs targeting security forces in particular.

The foiled earlier this month to try to launch mortar shells at a police station it was possible to be the first attack of its kind since the signing of the peace agreement.

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