Yorkshire Post

Javid rejects call for review panel on clash at Orgreave

‘Policing has changed’ says Home Office

- CHRIS BURN NEWS REPORTER ■ Email: chris.burn@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @chrisburn_post

HOME SECRETARY Sajid Javid has rejected an offer by the Bishop of Sheffield to establish an independen­t panel to examine the events surroundin­g the notorious ‘Battle of Orgreave’ at the height of the Miners’ Strike – less than three years after the Government refused to order a public inquiry.

Thousands of miners and police clashed at the South Yorkshire coking site on June 18, 1984 in the most violent events of the year-long miners’ strike.

Bishop of Sheffield The Rt Revd Dr Pete Wilcox said today he was told Mr Javid “was unpersuade­d” of the need for such a panel after he met with Home Office officials to put forward his proposal last summer.

He told The Yorkshire Post he was “disappoint­ed” by the decision and remains hopeful it could be reversed. “Orgreave remains unfinished business. There are unresolved questions about what happened at Orgreave and why.”

The Home Office said it had taken the decision after “careful considerat­ion”, taking into account how policing has changed since the 1980s.

Ninety-five miners were arrested at Orgreave, with 55 charged with riot, but court cases collapsed a year later due to unreliable police evidence. South Yorkshire Police later paid £425,000 in compensati­on to 39 pickets in out-of-court settlement­s.

In June 2015, the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission ruled that the passage of time

meant an investigat­ion into the force’s handling of events and allegation­s against police officers of assault and misconduct “could not now be pursued”. However, the IPCC’s report did find evidence “to support the allegation that offences of assault may have been committed” against miners and “that offences of perjury may have been committed by individual officers” .

In October 2016, then Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced there would be no inquiry into the events at Orgreave as there had been no deaths or wrongful conviction­s.

Dr Wilcox, who has been Bishop of Sheffield since September 2017, said he made his approach to the Home Office after discussion­s with local politician­s and South Yorkshire Police chief constable Stephen Watson. The bishop, who recently oversaw negotiatio­ns over the Sheffield street tree dispute, said he had not put himself forward to lead any Orgreave panel but would be “open” if any offer to do so was made.

Mr Javid’s decision to rule out an independen­t panel has been greeted with dismay by Orgreave campaigner­s. Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign chair Chris Hockney said: “We had high hopes the Bishop’s approach would be seen as a real chance to get to the truth about what happened at Orgreave and afterwards. It’s a real kick in the teeth not just for us but for all the people and institutio­ns who Bishop Pete has approached and who, like us, believe there’s a real need to address this part of history so mining communitie­s can get truth and justice.”

A Home Office spokesman said: “The Government’s decision not to accept an offer to set up a panel into Orgreave was made after careful considerat­ion and took into account how the policing landscape has changed since the events three decades ago.”

There are unresolved questions about what happened and why. Bishop of Sheffield The Rt Revd Dr Pete Wilcox who led calls for a panel of inquiry.

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