APART from the odd petrol bomb, minor explosion and fundraising bank
raid, Scotland has remained untouched by large-scale terrorism.
With Scottish cities either valued or ignored by the main Irish
factions, it has been left to a motley crew of clandestine nationalist
groups to create their own brand of tartan terror at home and south of
the Border.
One of the first to emerge, in the 1960s, was the Army of the
Provisional Government, led by a former British intelligence officer,
Major Frederick Alexander Colquhoun Boothby. They relied on hoax bomb
threats, throwing bricks through Conservative Party windows, and a
bungled bank raid to promote their cause. They secured the dubious
support of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin.
In the 1970s, the heyday of tartan terror, the Workers' Party of
Scotland put its name to a series of armed raids on Glasgow banks.
The nationalist campaign took a more violent twist with a rash of
explosions in 1971. Two bombs exploded at Edinburgh Castle in August
1971 during the Tattoo and caused extensive damage. No group was ever
identified with the incident.
The Tartan Army appeared in 1975 with explosions at electricity pylons
and oil pipelines, and the Army of the Scottish People, a militant
offshoot of the Scottish Republican Socialist League, made its mark with
a series of minor bombings and armed robberies.
One of the most concerted terrorist letter bomb campaigns was launched
by the Scottish National Liberation Army from 1983 to 1986. One went to
the Social Democratic Party HQ, others to Cabinet Ministers. One to
Margaret Thatcher exploded at 10 Downing Street and injured one person.
Mrs Thatcher was said to have been 40ft away at the time.
The group also claimed responsibility for planting an incendiary
device in the Ministry of Defence HQ and causing costly damage. There
were also rumours that they had planted a bomb at the Tory Party
conference in Perth in 1983, but this has never been confirmed.
The recent series of letter bombs sent from Aberdeen to Dounreay and
the Anglian Water HQ in Huntingdon prompted fears that the SNLA was
restarting its campaign.
Animal activists have been suspected of being behind a series of fire
bombs in Scotland last year which caused hundreds of thousands of pounds
of damage to research labs, an abattoir and a tannery, and they were
initially thought to be linked to the break-in at the Lothian and
Borders police HQ in Edinburgh.
In the last 20 years, there have been perhaps 50 to 60 attacks by
nationalist and other groups. Their efforts have often been labelled
amateurish and there have been several spectacularly bungled bombings or
raids.
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