Man questioned over Aughinish bomb released

Rusal-owned Aughinish Alumina.

GARDAร have released a man in his 40s who was arrested in connection with the discovery of viable bombs in Limerick and the north of Ireland.

Reliable sources said the man – who has not been charged with any offence – was being questioned as part of an ongoing cross-border investigation between Gardaรญ and the PSNI (Police Service of Northern Ireland).

One of the bombs was discovered close to the Aughinish Alumina refinery, located between Foynes and Askeaton in County Limerick.

Itโ€™s understood up to 100 of the 450 staff employed at the Rusal-owned Aughinish refinery were unable to leave the plant for several hours as a 350-metre security cordon was put in place for Gardaรญ and members of the Defence Forces responding at the scene between Friday night and Saturday morning.

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The Rusal alumina giant, which owns the plant, had not responded to media queries sent following the incident.

Gardaรญ were at one point investigating the possibility that the bomb could have been a reaction to Russiaโ€™s largest ever aerial bombardment on Ukraineโ€™s capital Kyiv last Thursday night, but it is understood that this is no longer the case.

A spokesman for the Irish Defence Forces confirmed the bomb was โ€œviableโ€, meaning it was capable of detonating and causing injuries or death.

A statement from the Defence Forces said that โ€œon Friday evening, bomb experts from the Defence Forces Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team responded to a request for assistance from An Garda Sรญochรกna (AGS) in relation to a suspect device in the area of Askeaton, County Limerickโ€.

โ€œFollowing an assessment, the EOD team confirmed the device was viable, and it was rendered safe. The EOD team then handed the scene over to AGS.โ€

The army EOD unit were on scene for a total of six hours, from arrival around 7pm on Friday to 1am on Saturday morning.

The bomb was discovered attached to a fuel tank that services the Aughinish Alumina refinery sports and social club building, located close to the Shannon estuary towns of Foynes and Askeaton.

The bomb is believed to have included a battery-timed mechanism so that it could be detonated long after the perpetrators had left the area.

Other bombs were found elsewhere in the north west of Ireland in the recent months.

It is understood the man is also connected to a number of other bombs planted at other sites both north and south of the border spanning recent years.

A Garda statement revealed that “as part of the investigation into the discovery of a number of attempted improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in the Northeast and Southwest of the country, a male (40s) was arrested on Sunday, 6th July 2025โ€.

โ€œThe male was arrested during an operation on Sunday evening involving national, regional, and local Garda units in County Monaghan.โ€

Gardaรญ said the suspect was detained under Section 30 of the Offences Against the State Act, 1939, at a Garda Station in the North Western region.

A statement on Tuesday evening revealed the man had been released without charged, with a file to be prepared for the Director of Public Prosecutions, adding that “the investigation remains ongoing”.