Omagh question that will not go away

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By Mark Simpson Ireland correspondent, BBC News Twenty-nine people were killed in the Omagh bombing in August 1998

Could the worst atrocity of Northern Ireland's Troubles have been prevented?

It's a question which has haunted the people of Omagh and this week's BBC Panorama programme, which revealed the intelligence services were monitoring the bombers' phone conversations, deepened their suspicions.

Now Prime Minister Gordon has ordered a review of the intelligence material gathered and how it was shared.

On the face of it, people in the County Tyrone town have moved on since the 1998 bombing and anyone visiting this week will have seen the streets swamped with bright red flags ahead of the county's all-Ireland Gaelic football final match against Kerry on Sunday.

But scratch the surface and the hurt is not far away.

Key questions

I bumped into Godfrey Wilson, whose 15-year-old daughter Lorraine was one of the 29 victims of the bombing. What did he think of the Panorama revelations?

He just shook his head and said: "The system has let me down. We were promised everything, and have ended up with nothing."

He was referring to the fact that the British and Irish prime ministers promised to track down the bombers, but, 10 years on, they have never been caught. But can the governments be blamed? The system has let me down. We were promised everything, and have ended up with nothing Godfrey WilsonFather of victim <a class="" href="/1/hi/northern_ireland/foyle_and_west/7621084.stm">PM orders review of Omagh tapes</a><a class="" href="/1/hi/uk/7606834.stm">GCHQ 'monitored Omagh calls'</a>

Panorama, and its investigative reporter John Ware, revealed that mobile phones used by the Real IRA bombers who targeted Omagh were being tapped.

The intelligence services were able to monitor the phones as the bomb was driven into Omagh.

This raises a number of key questions. Was there a chance to stop the bomb? Or were the phone conversations simply recorded and discovered later?

And if it did take a few days to discover the material, how quickly did the intelligence services then share it with the detectives working night and day to try to find the killers?

Inquiry call

The suspicion is that it wasn't shared as quickly as it should have been.

These are all matters now left to the Intelligence Services Commissioner to investigate.

Gordon Brown's decision to order a review shows the impact of the Panorama investigation.

However, the families of the Omagh victims want more. Many have called for a public inquiry.

More immediately, they want the phone-tap evidence to be made available to the relatives involved in a civil action against five men they believe were involved in the bombing.

This civil case is expected to end in the next four weeks, so time is short.

The story of what happened in Omagh back in August 1998 is complicated.

The families of those who died keep saying the same thing - they want to hear the truth. And they would prefer to hear it directly from the prime minister, not from a barrister in a court room or a journalist on TV.