The Scotsman

Fresh call for public inquiry into strike policing

- Alistair Grant

A fresh call has been made for a public inquiry into the policing of the 1984/85 miners’ strike as campaigner­s mark 40 years since it began.

Richard Leonard, a Labour MSP and former party leader in Scotland, said exminers and their families “deserve justice”.

Mr Leonard said the fact that miners north of the border were twice as likely to have been arrested than anywhere else in the UK should be taken into account.

Scottish ministers previously commission­ed an independen­t review into the impact of policing on local communitie­s during the strike. The probe was led by John Scott QC.

Legislatio­n was passed in 2022 to pardon those convicted of offences relating to strike action. However, this did not offer the prospect of compensati­on, as some had called for.

In Scotland, around 1,400 miners were arrested during the strike – which lasted just three days short of a year – with more than 500 subsequent­ly convicted.

Mr Leonard said: “The whole might of the state was brought to bear on the miners, their families and their communitie­s, and the effects are still being felt today as those injustices have still not been fully resolved.

“There must be a full public inquiry into the policing of the strike and that must include the disproport­ionate treatment of miners by the police in Scotland. The former miners and their families are heroes and they deserve justice.”

Mr Leonard has tabled a motion in Holyrood that describes the strike as “without parallel, the most significan­t industrial dispute since the 1926 general strike”. It adds: “The strike could not have endured without public support, including from women’s groups, the lesbian and gay community, trade unions and workers across the world.”

The motion “notes the belief that there is continuing need for investment in mining communitie­s, and further notes the call for a public inquiry into the policing of the strike”.

Mr Leonard has also secured cross-party support for a permanent memorial to be erected in Holyrood to the Scottish miners’ leader Mick Mcgahey.

He previously said Mr Mcgahey was a “workingcla­ss hero”, adding: “He was a man of integrity and intellect, a socialist and an internatio­nalist.

“It would be more than fitting for our Parliament to hold a permanent reminder of his contributi­on to Scottish history.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom