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Holy Cross Church: Controlled explosion on device Holy Cross Church: Pipe bomb intended to 'kill police officers'
(35 minutes later)
A controlled explosion has been carried out on a suspicious device outside a Catholic church in north Belfast. Police have said a pipe bomb found outside the front gates of a Catholic church in north Belfast was intended to kill PSNI officers.
The Crumlin Road remains closed following the discovery of the device at the front gates of Holy Cross Church. It was thrown at a police patrol on the Crumlin Road at 00:45 BST on Tuesday but did not explode.
About eight homes in the area were evacuated. The road is closed between Ardoyne roundabout and Cambrai Street. When the device did not detonate, a call was made five minutes later to the parish priest at Holy Cross Church.
The police said the road was likely to remain closed for some time on Tuesday. Eight nearby homes were evacuated while Army bomb experts made the device safe.
Earlier, Fr Gary Donegan said that Mass at the church had not been disrupted during the Troubles in Northern Ireland but there were concerns that 10:00 BST Mass would not go ahead. The Crumlin Road has now re-opened.
However, churchgoers were able to negotiate the cordon to get to church. Ch Supt Nigel Grimshaw said: "From information we have gathered so far this morning, we believe that this device may have been thrown at a police patrol vehicle at around 12.45am and failed to detonate.
'Shameful attack'
"The device, which has now been made safe, was described by ATO as both 'advanced' and 'sophisticated' and was clearly capable of killing the police officers in the vehicle had it exploded as those responsible intended.
"This was a shameful attack on officers who each day go out to serve this community and keep people safe and must be outrightly condemned."
The senior officer said "such disruption to community life" was "totally unacceptable".
"People should not be subjected to such inconvenience and disturbance to their everyday lives, particularly where families with young children, the elderly and vulnerable are forced out into the cold in the early hours of the morning," he said.
"The alert also had a significant impact on traffic using the Crumlin Road for the morning commute and for parishioners attending morning Mass at Holy Cross."
Ch Supt Grimshaw said the device bore the "hallmarks of dissident republicans".
Rector of the church Fr Gary Donegan also condemned the attack.
"I don't know what their motive is behind any of this kind of behaviour," Fr Donegan told the BBC."I don't know what their motive is behind any of this kind of behaviour," Fr Donegan told the BBC.
"At the moment, all they have managed to do is prevent, should there have been a sick call or an emergency, the priests from leaving the monastery here.""At the moment, all they have managed to do is prevent, should there have been a sick call or an emergency, the priests from leaving the monastery here."
'Cut off' Priests had been unable to get in or out of the grounds during the alert.
Fr Donegan said priests could not get in or out of the grounds.
"We're completely cut off at the moment," he said.
One family, who was moved out of their home, spent the night at Ardoyne community centre.