A prominent young journalist was killed during a night of rioting in Londonderry on Thursday, in what police in Northern Ireland have described as a “terrorist incident.”
Dissident republicans are believed to be responsible for the death of Lyra McKee, 29, who was shot during violent unrest in the Creggan area of the city, according to police. Images from the scene showed cars alight as a crowd threw fireworks and petrol bombs at emergency vehicles.
The city – which is referred to by Irish nationalists as Derry and British unionists as Londonderry – is a short drive from the border with the Republic of Ireland.
McKee was standing close to a police vehicle when she was wounded by a single gunman firing shots into a residential area. She died soon after from her injuries, assistant chief constable Mark Hamilton told reporters Friday. Police do not know if she was working as a journalist at the time, or was in the city for personal reasons.
During a news conference on Friday, Hamilton described the death of McKee as “horrendous and unjustified” and appealed for calm. Overnight he announced that police were treating the shooting as a “terrorist incident” and had launched a murder inquiry.
McKee, according to literary agents Janklow & Nesbit UK, was born in Belfast, and had written for a number of publications, including The Atlantic and Buzzfeed News.
In 2016, she was named as one of Forbes Magazine’s 30 under 30 in media in Europe.
She is the first journalist to be killed in the United Kingdom since 2001, according to nonprofit organization the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Hamilton confirmed that police suspect the shooting was carried out by dissident republicans, namely the New Irish Republican Army (IRA).
‘Orchestrated violence’
Thursday’s unrest in Derry comes in advance of Easter weekend, during which republicans mark the anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising, considered among the most important dates in the struggle for Irish independence.
Hamilton said police had been in the area carrying out searches on “violent dissident republicans” who they believed were storing firearms and explosives for a number of planned attacks.
They were concerned the weapons could have been used over the Easter weekend in the city.
According to Hamilton, a crowd gathered just after 9 p.m. (4 p.m. ET) on Thursday and over 50 petrol bombs were thrown at officers during the “orchestrated violence.” Two vehicles were hijacked and set on fire, he said.
“Police didn’t use any force last night. All the violence was directed towards us,” Hamilton said.
At around 11 p.m. (6 p.m. ET), there were around 100 people in the area, including young people and members of the media. The gunman fired a number of shots, Hamilton said.
Witness recounts moment gunman struck
Journalist Leona O’Neill was standing next to McKee as the clock struck 11. She told CNN it was around then that the riot took a more “sinister turn.”
O’Neill detailed how a masked gunman emerged from the street corner and fired “indiscriminately up the street towards police vehicles but also towards a group of people who were just watching what was happening in their street.”
“The gunman was just pointing the gun around the corner,” O’Neill said. “The amount of smoke there – the fire and flames coming from the police vehicles – he could not have seen anything of that street.”
“Her friend turned around and saw her and they started crying that she had been shot. They were hysterical,” O’Neill said.
McKee, who was unconscious, was quickly carried by police into the backseat of a car and rushed to hospital, O’Neill continued.
O’Neill said that the group she was standing with was “a good distance away from where the petrol bottles were being thrown” and “people thought they were safe.” She said the mood changed after McKee was shot with bystanders directing their anger towards the rioters and hurling abuse.
“There was a lot of anger on the ground, people were shouting down at the rioters,” she added.
Growing unrest
A recent spate of violence in Northern Ireland has raised fears that sectarian violence might be revived, amid ongoing concerns over the effects of Brexit.
In January, a car bomb was detonated in Derry in a suspected attack by the New IRA.
Many fear that Britain’s departure from the European Union will mean the reintroduction of border posts on the frontier between Northern Ireland, part of the UK, and the Republic of Ireland, a European Union member.
Border infrastructure was often targeted by Irish nationalist paramilitaries during the “Troubles” – the 40-year sectarian conflict in which more than 3,500 people died.
In a statement on Friday morning, British Prime Minister Theresa May said: “The death of Lyra McKee in last night’s suspected terrorist incident in Londonderry is shocking and truly senseless. My deepest condolences go to her family, friends and colleagues. She was a journalist who died doing her job with great courage.”
Ireland’s Prime Minister, or Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar condemned the killing of McKee “in the strongest possible terms” on Twitter, writing, “We are all full of sadness after last night’s events. We cannot allow those who want to propagate violence, fear and hate to drag us back to the past.”
Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary of the National Union of Journalists, said in a statement: “The killing of a journalist in these circumstances is deeply shocking. To wake up to this news on Good Friday morning is disturbing and profoundly saddening.”
“A bright light has been quenched and that plunges all of us in to darkness,” Stanistreet added.
Northern Ireland has two main political parties, the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Fein. Sinn Fein’s Mary Lou McDonald offered her condolences to McKee’s family in a statement, adding, “Her contribution to society stands in marked contrast to those who brutally took her life.”
“The murder of Lyra McKee is an attack on all the people of this community, an attack on the peace process and on the Good Friday Agreement,” McDonald said. “It is well past time for these groups to go, to end their actions and let the society get on with building a peaceful future.”
The Good Friday, or Belfast, Agreement of 1998 was a turning point for the region ending years of bloodletting.
The Democratic Unionist party leader, Arlene Foster, tweeted: “Heartbreaking news. A senseless act. A family has been torn apart. Those who brought guns onto our streets in the 70s, 80s and 90s were wrong. It is equally wrong in 2019. No one wants to go back. My thoughts are also with the brave officers who stood in defense of their community.”
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that Janklow & Nesbit is a literary agency.
CNN’s Bianca Britton, Jonny Hallam, Sara Mazloumsaki in Atlanta and Peter Taggart in Northern Ireland contributed to this report.