Sean O'Callaghan
Sean O'Callaghan joined the Provisonal IRA in 1970, aged fiteen, and he was active in Northern Ireland in the mid-seventies, taking part in numerous terrorist attacks which resulted in the deaths of two members of the security forces. He resigned from the IRA in 1975, just short of his 21st birthday, having become disillusioned with everything it stoof for. He rejoined it in 1979, this time volunteering his services to the Irish police as in informer. He continued this work until 1985 when he...See more
Sean O'Callaghan joined the Provisonal IRA in 1970, aged fiteen, and he was active in Northern Ireland in the mid-seventies, taking part in numerous terrorist attacks which resulted in the deaths of two members of the security forces. He resigned from the IRA in 1975, just short of his 21st birthday, having become disillusioned with everything it stoof for. He rejoined it in 1979, this time volunteering his services to the Irish police as in informer. He continued this work until 1985 when he had to leave Ireland as suspicion about him mounted. In 1988 he handed himself up to British police and admitted involvement in IRA activities in Northern Ireland in the mid-seventies. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and released under Royal Prerogative in 1996. After his release he wrote his autobiography The Informer, and has continued to work for peace in Ireland. Today he works with young people at risk of getting involved in criminal or extremist activity. See less
Sean O'Callaghan's Featured Books
Sean O'Callaghan book reviews
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To Hell or Barbados: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ireland
definitive History of Irish slaves
This is currently the definitive history of the Irish enslaved by Cromwell and removed to the Caribbean and America. A must for anyone interested in enslavement of the Gaels, and early Western ... Read More
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To Hell or Barbados: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ireland
only book of its kind
by MRLinCA, Apr 1, 2007
To Hell or Barbados is the only book available--and to some degree, the only information available in print or internet--that deals with this virtually invisible history. Of all the Irish, Scottish, ... Read More