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Irish deploy armed police and military-style checkpoints to tackle gang war

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Armed Gardai from the force's Emergency Response Unit on patrol, as gang violence has resulted in two murders in four days, in Dublin, Ireland. Photo: AP
Associated Press

Ireland’s police force deployed military-style road checkpoints Tuesday as the government announced toughened measures to try to prevent a gang war in Dublin from claiming more lives.

Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald said a 55-member armed police unit would be created for Dublin in hopes of suppressing what she called an “evil and sinister cycle of gangland violence”.

The move is significant in a country where police typically patrol unarmed. It was announced at an emergency meeting with police chiefs following Monday night’s killing of a brother of Gerry “The Monk” Hutch, a gang chieftain credited with directing many of Ireland’s most famous bank heists.

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Taxi driver Eddie Hutch, 59, was shot several times in the hallway of his home. He was targeted in apparent retaliation for Friday’s gun attack on a boxing weigh-in being attended by senior figures from a rival gang led by Irish fugitive Christy Kinahan, the other key figure in the underworld blood-letting.

READ MORE: Dublin’s gangland feud erupts in bullets and bloodshed as kingpin’s brother killed in revenge attack

In Friday’s attack, five gunmen allegedly from the Hutch camp targeted Kinahan loyalists arriving at the hotel for the boxing event. The gunmen, including three armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles and disguised as an elite police unit, shot three men, killing one, in front of scores of civilians including young children.

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