Device left outside Londonderry police station was 'viable explosive'
A device left in a hijacked vehicle outside a police station in Londonderry on Sunday was a "viable explosive device", officers have confirmed.
Police had previously said the object was an elaborate hoax made to look like a car bomb.
During the incident a delivery driver was hijacked by three masked men and made to drive his car to Waterside police station, where it was abandoned.
It sparked a major security alert which led to some children not being able to get to school on Monday.
Providing an update on the investigation, PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Bobby Singleton said: "Following further technical examination of the object recovered from a hijacked vehicle outside Waterside police station on Sunday evening, police can now confirm it was a viable explosive device.
"This further underlines the reckless and callous disregard by those responsible for the safety of the driver, the local community and the police officers who serve them.
"I would again appeal to anyone who was in the vicinity of Milldale Crescent in Curryneirin or in the vicinity of Waterside police station on Sunday evening around 10.30pm to come forward with information on 101 or through Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111."
The incident came just days after police said they believed the New IRA could be responsible for an incident in which two officers escaped injury when their car was targeted in a bomb attack in Strabane, Co Tyrone.
On Tuesday evening, detectives from the PSNI Terrorism Investigation Unit carried out a search at a property in the Sion Mills area in relation to the Strabane attack.
A number of items were seized and taken away for further forensic examination.
Politicians from across Northern Ireland have condemned the recent security attacks.
Speaking during a visit to Derry on Tuesday, Sinn Fein vice president Michelle O'Neill branded the recent incidents "futile and reckless".
She said: "It causes nothing - only chaos and dysfunction to people of this city and also in Strabane.
"I think these actions have no place in today's society and as political leaders we must call it out when we see it.
"This could have had catastrophic implications. We could have had the loss of life of two police officers.
"These people are in conflict with the community in which they live."
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