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This is an archive article published on March 6, 2024

UK lowers domestic threat level for Northern Ireland to ‘substantial’ from ‘severe’

MI5 had raised the threat level for the region to 'severe' about a year ago, following attacks on police officers and weeks ahead of celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of a peace deal that largely ended three decades of violence.

irelandMI5 had raised the threat level for the region to 'severe' about a year ago (Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Ardfern)

Britain’s MI5 intelligence agency has lowered the threat level in Northern Ireland from domestic terrorism to “substantial”, meaning an attack is likely, from “severe”, which meant an attack was highly likely.

MI5 had raised the threat level for the region to “severe” about a year ago, following attacks on police officers and weeks ahead of celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of a peace deal that largely ended three decades of violence.

The latest downgrade to the threat level is “testament to the tremendous efforts of the Police Service of Northern Ireland and MI5 to tackle Northern Ireland related terrorism,” the British government’s Northern Ireland Office said in a statement on Wednesday.

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The decision to change the threat level is taken by MI5, independently of government ministers.

While the 1998 Good Friday Agreement largely ended sectarian violence in Northern Ireland, police officers can sometimes become targets for small splinter groups of mostly nationalist militants opposed to Britain’s rule over the region.

The change to Northern Ireland’s threat level brings it in line with the national threat level for the UK.

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