Stoke Newington Road lorry bomb
| Stoke Newington Road lorry bomb incident | |
|---|---|
| Part of the Troubles | |
| Location | Shacklewell, London, United Kingdom |
| Date | 14 November 1992 1:00 am (UTC) |
Attack type | Shooting |
| Deaths | 0 |
| Injured | 1 |
| Perpetrator | Provisional Irish Republican Army |
On 14 November 1992, 3.2 tonnes of explosives was discovered during a routine check on a lorry travelling on Stoke Newington Road, part of the A10, one of the main routes between London and the north. The Volvo lorry was stopped by police around 1 am; the occupants fled. Constable Raymond Hall - a former Royal Engineer soldier and Falklands War veteran - chased the suspects to a residential street, Belgrade Road no.7 where he was shot twice by one of them. Shortly afterwards police arrested one man, Irish lorry driver Patrick Kelly, a member of the Provisional IRA, who was alleged to have been driving the lorry.
The large amount of explosives, which was bigger than that used in the Baltic Exchange bombing earlier that year, could have caused "massive destruction". Investigations found detonation material inside the lorry as well. Officers from the Metropolitan Police Anti-Terrorist Branch were unable to determine the intended target, although it occurred on the day of the Lord Mayor's Show.