- Ronnie Bunting
Ronnie Bunting was an
Irish republican andsocialist activist inIreland . He became a member of theOfficial IRA in the early 1970s and was a founder member of theIrish National Liberation Army group from 1974. He was assassinated in 1980.Background
Bunting's father
Ronald Bunting , had been a major in theBritish Army and Ronnie Bunting grew up in various military barracks around the world. He returned toNorthern Ireland in his teens. Having completed his education, Bunting briefly became a teacher ofhistory inBelfast , but from around 1971, he became a full time political and paramilitary activist. Unlike mostProtestant s in Northern Ireland, Bunting became a militant Irish republican. His father, by contrast, was a committedloyalist , who organised armed stewards for demonstrations called byIan Paisley - most famously atBurntollet , when his followers attacked a march of thePeople's Democracy on4 January ,1969 .Membership of the Official IRA
Bunting joined the
Official Irish Republican Army (OIRA) in around 1970 - being attracted to their left wing and secular interpretation of Irish republicanism and believing in the necessity of armed revolution to overthrow Northern Ireland. The other wing of the IRA - theProvisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) was seen by some to be more Catholic and nationalist in its outlook. At this time, the communal conflict known asthe Troubles was beginning and the Official IRA were involved in shootings and bombings. Bunting was interned in 1971 and held inLong Kesh . He was one of only two Protestants interned out of 350 initial detainees. Bunting was later released in 1973.plit and feud after joining the INLA
In 1974, Bunting followed
Seamus Costello and other militants, who disagreed with the OIRA's ceasefire of 1972 into a new grouping, theIrish National Liberation Army (INLA). Immediately, a violent feud broke out between the OIRA and the INLA that simmered until 1977. Seamus Costello was killed in this year by an OIRA gunman in Dublin. Bunting was hit in the neck by a rifle bullet while driving in Belfast. It is not clear whether the bullet was fired by the British Army, loyalists or rival republicans. In any case, Bunting and his family hid inWales until 1978, when he returned to Belfast.For the remaining two years of his life, Bunting was the military leader of the INLA. The grouping regularly attacked the British Army and RUC in Belfast. Bunting called in claims of responsibility to the media by the code name "Captain Green". The INLA's most notorious activity around this time was the assassination of
Airey Neave .Death
In 1980 several gunmen entered Bunting's home in the Lower Falls area of Belfast and shot him, his wife Suzanne and another INLA man, Noel Lyttle. Suzanne Bunting survived, but the two men were killed. The attack was claimed by the
Ulster Defence Association but the INLA claimed that the SAS were involved.Bunting's father refused to let his son be buried with other dead INLA men and instead buried him in a family plot.
ources
*Jack Holland, Henry McDonald - "INLA -Deadly Divisions"
*Walter Ellis - "The Beginning of the End"
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