Omagh
District Council
Omagh District Councillors held an emergency meeting on Monday
as the community struggled to come to terms with the tragedy.
A trust fund was set up with the First Trust Bank in the town's
High Street. Books of Condolences were opened in every village
in the council area and in many local churches.
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Dr Sean Brady |

Dr Robin Eames |
Volunteers
arrive to help
Volunteers from all over the province and from the South arrived
at the hospitals, that were treating the injured, to offer help.
Spanish doctors flew into Northern Ireland with relatives of the
injured to work along side hospital staff. The Spanish Deputy
Prime Minister, Francisco Alvarez Cascos, arrived.
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Omagh District Council Offices |
Church
Leaders meet in Armagh
The church leaders, Catholic primate Dr Sean Brady, Methodist
President the Rev David Kerr, Presbyterian Moderator Dr John Dixon
and Church of Ireland primate Dr Robin Eames, met in Armagh. They
called on people throughout the country to attend services of
remembrance exactly a week after the massacre. Those unable to
attend church services were asked to stop and pray at exactly
3.10pm, the time the bomb exploded. |

Patricia Keyes and Helguero Peuch |
Message
from Pope John
Paul II
The Pope prayed for those who lost their lives in the bombing,
and urged people to keep their faith in the peace process.
"I hope for the dear island that the people of goodwill will
not yield to violence." He called the bombing "tragic
and nonsensical" and evoked eternal rest for those who died.
IRA statement
Late on Monday night the Real IRA claimed resposibity for the
bomb. In a statement they claimed they never intended to kill
civilians and the target had been commercial. The statement was
greeted with universal disbelief and contempt.
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In a press release containing this photograph of the bombsite
the police confirmed that 27 of the deceased have been identified. |
The three Donegal
boys are taken home.
Late on Monday night the sad journey of the three Donegal children
killed in the bomb started from Omagh. The cortege was accompanied
by the then RUC to the border. The three hearses were met at Bridgend
by a Garda escort. Both sets of officers saluted as the bodies
crossed the border on their final journey home.
Buncrana came to a standstill just after midnight where many of
the town's 4,000-strong population watched and wept as the hearses
arrived.
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