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UDA confirm guns decommissioned | UDA confirm guns decommissioned |
(11 minutes later) | |
The Ulster Defence Association (UDA) has said it has put its weapons beyond use. | |
It is understood the decommissioning happened in recent weeks. | |
The loyalist paramilitary group was five weeks away from a government deadline to complete the decommissioning of its weapons. | The loyalist paramilitary group was five weeks away from a government deadline to complete the decommissioning of its weapons. |
Once this amnesty ended, any UDA weapons discovered by police could have been forensically tested and the evidence used in court cases. | |
The UDA and the Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) , a cover name it used for its paramilitary activities, are suspected of being behind 400 murders between 1971 and 2001. | The UDA and the Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) , a cover name it used for its paramilitary activities, are suspected of being behind 400 murders between 1971 and 2001. |
A second, and older loyalist group, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) completed decommissioning in June last year. | A second, and older loyalist group, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) completed decommissioning in June last year. |
BEYOND ARMS | BEYOND ARMS |
Vincent Kearney, BBC NI home affairs correspondent | Vincent Kearney, BBC NI home affairs correspondent |
On 9 February the legislation that allows the decommissioning body to operate ends. | |
Any UDA weapons that would have been found after that would have been forensically tested. | Any UDA weapons that would have been found after that would have been forensically tested. |
Evidence gathered from that could have been used in future court cases and possibly secure convictions. | Evidence gathered from that could have been used in future court cases and possibly secure convictions. |
At the moment if members of the UDA have a certificate saying they were moving weapons from one arms dump to another for decommissioning there is an amnesty, as it were. | At the moment if members of the UDA have a certificate saying they were moving weapons from one arms dump to another for decommissioning there is an amnesty, as it were. |
The government has made it clear that the UDA would be treated as common criminals after the legislation expires and that police would actively seek their weapons. | The government has made it clear that the UDA would be treated as common criminals after the legislation expires and that police would actively seek their weapons. |
Details of the UDA process are being announced at a news conference on Wednesday morning and will be confirmed in a statement from General John de Chastelain, the head of the international decommissioning body which witnessed the act. | |
It is understood there will also be a statement from additional independent eyewitnesses, Lord Eames and Sir George Quigley, on what happened to the class="bodl" href="/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/8243776.stm">UDA's arms . | |
The move comes more than 15 years after the UDA announced its ceasefire and 12 years after the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning was set up. | The move comes more than 15 years after the UDA announced its ceasefire and 12 years after the Independent International Commission on Decommissioning was set up. |
A breakaway UDA faction in south east Antrim decommissioned a small quantity of weapons last summer and told General De Chastelain it would also complete the process before the February deadline. | A breakaway UDA faction in south east Antrim decommissioned a small quantity of weapons last summer and told General De Chastelain it would also complete the process before the February deadline. |
The body which monitors paramilitary activity in Northern Ireland said in its last report the UDA remained effectively split into two distinct groups - the mainstream UDA and the south east Antrim group. | |
The Independent Monitoring Commission said in November members of both factions remained involved in a range of criminal activity. | The Independent Monitoring Commission said in November members of both factions remained involved in a range of criminal activity. |