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1989 Deal barracks bombing

The ruins of the recreation centre
The 1989 Deal barracks bombing took place on September 22, 1989 in the Royal Marines barracks at Deal, Kent, England.

At 8:30 GMT, a loud explosion occurred inside the barracks, devastating the recreation centre of the Royal Marines School of Music. Ten musicians were killed instantly, and twenty-two were injured, most of whom were teenagers. People claimed they had heard the blast as far as the centre of Deal, nearly 3.2 km (2 miles) away. The bomb, which had been placed in the recreation centre changing room, destroyed the three floors of the centre, as well as damaging several nearby houses. One marine would die a month later from injuries sustained in the explosion.

The Provisional Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the bombing, saying it was a continuation of their campaign to rid Northern Ireland of all British troops (who had been deployed in the region for nearly twenty years). Many people, including Opposition lawmakers, were somewhat outraged that the military base was being guarded in places by employees of a private security firm. Security would be reviewed at all military installations in the United Kingdom and abroad, including West Germany, where five attacks were carried out by the PIRA against troops stationed there.

The Deal bombing was not the first nor the last to occur in the UK against military outposts. In August 1988, a barracks in north London was bombed, and in April 1990, the headquarters of the Parachute Regiment in Shropshire was destroyed by three explosions.

No one was ever caught or convicted for the bombing in Deal.

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