DUBLIN, Ireland, April 4, 2006

Sinn Fein Big Outed As Spy Found Dead

Party's Former Legislative Chief Was Revealed As British Spy In December

    • Police say Denis Donaldson, a former top official of Sinn Fein seen here in this December 2005 photo, was found dead in County Donegal, Ireland, Tuesday April 4, 2006. Photo: Dec. 9, 2005.

      Police say Denis Donaldson, a former top official of Sinn Fein seen here in this December 2005 photo, was found dead in County Donegal, Ireland, Tuesday April 4, 2006. Photo: Dec. 9, 2005.  (AP)

    • Gerry Adams, president of Sinn Fein and member of the British Parliament, speaks to reporters Thursday, March 17, 2005, in Washington. Adams says he doesn't know who killed former Sinn Fein official Denis Donaldson.

      Gerry Adams, president of Sinn Fein and member of the British Parliament, speaks to reporters Thursday, March 17, 2005, in Washington. Adams says he doesn't know who killed former Sinn Fein official Denis Donaldson.  (AP)

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(AP)  A former Sinn Fein official recently exposed as a British spy was found fatally shot Tuesday after apparently being tortured, police said — a slaying certain to send shock waves through Northern Ireland's peace process.

Denis Donaldson was Sinn Fein's former legislative chief in the failed power-sharing government of Northern Ireland. He admitted in December he had been on the payroll of the British secret service and the province's anti-terrorist police for two decades. He went into hiding because the traditional Irish Republican Army punishment for informing is death.

But the IRA denied responsibility in a one-line statement. "The IRA had no involvement whatsoever in the death of Denis Donaldson," the outlawed group said.

Irish Foreign Minister Michael McDowell said the 55-year-old Donaldson had been tortured before being killed — apparently with one or two shotgun blasts to his head — inside his isolated home near Glenties, County Donegal, in northwest Ireland. He was last seen alive Monday while walking in the village, McDowell said.

"His right forearm is almost severed," McDowell said. "He was shot in the head and mutilation was done to his body. It's a murder we're dealing with."

Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern and British Prime Minister Tony Blair both condemned the murder.

The killing comes at a pivotal moment in Northern Ireland's 13-year-old peace process.

On Thursday, Blair and Ahern are to travel to Northern Ireland to reveal a new blueprint for reviving a Protestant-Catholic administration, the intended cornerstone of the province's 1998 peace accord.

The plan — 3½ years of diplomacy in the making — would call for Northern Ireland's legislature to reconvene in mid-May and face a Nov. 24 deadline to elect an administration.

Continued



©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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