On the morning of 9 April 1990, two UDR armoured Land Rovers were travelling from Ballykinler Barracks to Downpatrick.[4] An IRA unit had planted a 1,000-pound (450 kg) improvised landmine in a culvert under the Ballydugan Road, just outside the town.[4] The unit waited in woodland overlooking the road, about 350 ft (110 m) away.[4] As the Land Rovers drove over the culvert, the IRA detonated the bomb by command wire.[4] The huge blast blew the vehicle into a field and gouged a large crater in the road, 50 ft (15 m) wide and 15 ft (5 m) deep.[4] A witness described "a scene of utter carnage".[4] Four soldiers were killed: Michael Adams (23), John Birch (28), John Bradley (25), and Steven Smart (23).[4] It was the biggest loss of life suffered by the UDR since the 1983 Ballygawley landmine attack.[5] The soldiers in the other Land Rover suffered severe shock and were airlifted to hospital.[5] Police said a civilian driver also suffered shock and another received cuts and bruises.[6]
Aftermath
The bombers escaped on a motorcycle which had been stolen in Newry a week earlier, and was later found abandoned in Downpatrick. The IRA issued a statement saying the attack was carried out by members of its South Down Brigade.[5]
British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, said on BBC radio: You take these murders of these four people today alongside those decisions in the Supreme Court of the Republic not to extradite those accused of violent crime - and one is very, very depressed.[5]Charles Haughey, the Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, condemned the attack as an "atrocity".[6]
A 23 year-old man was later sentenced to 15 years in prison for the attack. He had driven a scout car for the bombers when it was planted the day before the attack.[7]
^ abcdefgMcKittrick, David (2001). Lost Lives: The Stories of the Men, Women and Children who Died as a Result of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Random House. p. 1195.