Hijacked car driven to Northern Irish police station contained improvised bomb, police say


BELFAST, March 31 (Reuters) - ⁠Irish nationalist militants were likely behind the ⁠hijacking and placing of an improvised explosive device ‌in a food delivery vehicle that was ordered to drive to a Northern Irish police station before the device was ​made safe, police said on ⁠Tuesday.

The fast food delivery ⁠driver was forced to stop by two masked men ⁠at ‌around 2230 local time on Monday and drive to the police station in ⁠Lurgan, around 30 kilometres from Belfast. He escaped ​from the ‌car and alerted security staff that the hijackers ⁠had ​placed an object in the boot, police said.

Over 100 homes nearby were evacuated while a controlled explosion was ⁠carried out to make the ​device safe.

"Our investigation is in its early stages but we believe it's highly likely that dissident republican groups ⁠are responsible," Police Service of Northern Ireland Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson said in a statement.

"We now know that this was a crude, but viable ​improvised explosive device. As unsophisticated ⁠as it was, it posed asignificant risk to the ​life of the terrified delivery ‌worker, our security staff and ​the local community."

(Reporting by Amanda Ferguson, writing by Padraic Halpin; editing by Sarah Young)

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