Craigavon mobile shop killings

Craigavon mobile shop killings
Part of the Troubles
Craigavon mobile shop killings is located in Northern Ireland
Craigavon mobile shop killings
LocationDrumbeg estate in Craigavon, County Armagh, Northern Ireland
Date28 March 1991
Attack type
shooting
Weapons9mm Browning pistol
Deaths3 civilians
PerpetratorUlster Volunteer Force

On 28 March 1991 a member of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a loyalist paramilitary group, shot dead three Catholic civilians at a mobile shop in Craigavon, County Armagh, Northern Ireland.[1] The gunman boarded the van and shot two teenage girls working there, then forced a male customer to lie on the pavement and shot him also. The killings were claimed by the "Protestant Action Force", who alleged the mobile shop was owned by an Irish republican. Staff said they had been harassed by Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldiers for not serving them.

The killings were carried out by the Mid-Ulster UVF, which was commanded by Billy Wright. A UVF member was convicted and imprisoned in 1995 for being the getaway driver. He and another loyalist named the killer, but he has never been charged. Relatives of the victims took a civil case against him, and in 2021 Belfast High Court issued an order holding him liable for the killings.

  1. ^ "Index of Deaths from the Conflict". Conflict Archive on the Internet. Retrieved 5 January 2018.

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