Seamus Heaney | Seamus Blake | Seamus O'Neill | Seamus Blackley | Seamus Mallon | Séamus Ryan | Seamus McNamara | Séamus Ennis | Seamus Ennis | Séamus Egan | Seamus Egan | Séamus Cunningham | Billy Twomey | Séamus Qualter | Seamus O'Sullivan | Seamus O'Kane | Seamus McSporran | Seamus McGarvey | SEAMUS Lifetime Achievement Award | Seamus Leydon | Seamus Kennedy | Seamus Haji | Seamus Elliott | Seamus Deane | Seamus Daly | Bill Twomey, Jr. |
In 1972, Bell, now Belfast Brigade adjutant, along with Seamus Twomey, Martin McGuinness, and Gerry Adams were flown to London by the Royal Air Force for secret ceasefire talks with British government ministers.
Woodfield and Steele also represented the British Government at that meeting, along with William Whitelaw, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, and Paul Channon, a millionaire Guinness heir and minister of state at the Northern Ireland Office; the IRA was again represented by Adams and Ó Conaill, along with Seán MacStiofáin, the leader of the delegation, Séamus Twomey, Martin McGuinness, Ivor Bell, and Myles Shevlin, a solicitor.
Although author Toby Harnden and others have alleged that it was ordered by elements of the IRA leadership (Seamus Twomey and Brian Keenan), other republican leaders were reported to be very unhappy about it.