Daily Mirror

Boiling point

Community tells how race tensions with police led to carnage on the streets

- BY SANJEETA BAINS Sanjeeta.bains@mirror.co.uk SanjeetaBa­ins

IT was a warm summer day, but it was the heat from cars burning in the street that made Ram Parkash feel as though he was walking through hell. Ram was 18 and returning home to Handsworth in Birmingham from a school trip, only to find his hometown on fire as tensions between locals and police erupted into riots.

“Cars were turned over and burning, buildings were looted,” Ram, now 57, recalls. “It became the war zone it was always going to end up as. The tensions had been there for a long time.”

It was 1981. Unemployme­nt was high and in many areas black people had poor relationsh­ips with police due to “stop and search” laws. Similar uprisings had taken place in Brixton in South London and Toxteth in Liverpool.

Hector Pinkney, 70, was a youth club worker at the time, arranging activities for youngsters to take their minds off “how terrible and bleak things were”.

The issues form the backdrop to the heartwrenc­hing new BBC2 drama My Name Is Leon, about a mixed-race boy taken into foster care and separated from his blond, blue-eyed baby brother.

Sir Lenny Henry, its executive producer, has a cameo role playing an elderly mentor called Mr Johnson.

Hector’s real-life efforts to stop riots over two July days were not enough amid “constant police persecutio­n”.

A lifelong champion of the Handsworth community, Hector received an MBE in 2011. He recalls how black men were arrested for “just standing on street corners”, leading to many children going into care and families being torn apart.

“I ran martial arts classes and rollerskat­ing groups, back when youth clubs had money for things like that. Back then police would take you to the station for no reason and beat you. They’d give you a jam sandwich and cup of tea. And spit in your tea. They’d put black youngsters’ heads in toilets and flush the chain.

“Police wanted to make a stripe for themselves. To say: ‘Look, boss, I’ve arrested a couple of black guys’.”

Former West Midlands Police chief superinten­dent,

Mike Layton, says: “Policing is not a perfect science. Sometimes things go very wrong, but the heart of policing is the community style. Without those relationsh­ips you can’t reassure the public, or detect and prevent crime.” Mike, author of Birmingham’s Frontline, adds: “During the 1981

If anyone is shocked by what happens to Leon, it still happens

SIR LENNY HENRY ON NEW BBC2 DRAMA

riots, one section of the community felt discrimina­ted against by the police and relations broke down.

“However since the 80s, great strides have been made in improving relations, with the drive to increase black and Asian police officers.” Jagwant Johal, 17 in 1981, recalls “a bubbling pot that finally boiled over”, saying it had been “just general hell” every day. The race campaigner says: “Black and Asian youths were constantly subjected to stop and search. Tensions with ing fo and I hear marc

“Sh We h on H

“S Asia gath out, in th out.

Le flags upco

Police would take you to the station for no reason and beat you, they’d spit in your tea

HECTOR PINKNEY RECALLING HANDSWORTH TENSIONS IN 1981

h police meant everyone was prepar-or something to happen. My friends I were heading to a funfair when we rd a rumour that a National Front ch was coming to Handsworth. hopkeepers started boarding shops. had to protect ourselves – an attack Handsworth was an attack on us all. oon there was a crowd of 100 black, an and white young people. Police hered with riot vans. A battle broke with bricks flying. My friend got hit he head by one, blood was pouring A pub landlord patched him up.” ess than a mile away, Union Jack s hung from windows celebratin­g the oming Charles and Diana royal wedding. By the time of the Birmingham riots, New Faces 1975 winner Lenny had left the Midlands after years using comedy as his “shield and sword”. He says: “Growing up, I lived three miles from Smethwick and the racism was so bad Malcolm X showed up to try and help. As a schoolboy. I was bullied every day, I had racist abuse thrown at me.”

Ram recalls a “whites only” sign at a club: “That day-in, day-out’ racial hatred is hard for even the most level-headed of people, so there is a sense of inevitabil­ity of what happened.” But the community was not fractured by racism “bar a minority”, says Ram, who had black, white and Asian friends. Recalling the riots, he says: “When my dad got home he ran to the shed, picked up a hammer and ran back out. We never asked what he used it for. He was just fighting for a community protecting itself from the police.” Over July 10 and 11 Birmingham suffered the worst of that year’s violence. It led to damage costing over £500,000, 85 injured police officers and hundreds of arrests.

The Government-commission­ed Lord Scarman report into the Brixton riots in April 1981 found evidence of the disproport­ionate, indiscrimi­nate use of “stop and search” powers against black people.

It also identified several police failures but did not explicitly condemn police racism and denied “institutio­nal racism”.

It was symbolical­ly “accepted” by then Home Secretary, William Whitelaw, but the Thatcher government failed to adjust policies as Scarman proposed. Lenny says: “If anyone watches My Name is Leon and is shocked by what happens to Leon, I want them to know it is still happening. And it shouldn’t be.”

Hector now works with officers, but adds: “There’s always going to be tension, there are underlying issues to sort out. But we still need law and order.”

Ram says: “There have been improvemen­ts building in police and community relationsh­ips.” Last year Jagwant launched the Birmingham Race Impact Group to promote racial justice.

■ My Name is Leon airs at 9pm tonight on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer.

 ?? ?? CAMEO Sir Lenny as mentor Mr Jackson
CAMEO Sir Lenny as mentor Mr Jackson
 ?? ?? TENSION Police on duty in Handsworth in July 1981
TENSION Police on duty in Handsworth in July 1981
 ?? ?? IN DRAMA Malachi Kirby, as Tufty, and Sir Lenny
IN DRAMA Malachi Kirby, as Tufty, and Sir Lenny
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? EFFORTS Hector ran the local youth club
EFFORTS Hector ran the local youth club
 ?? ?? TARGETED Shops had windows smashed in Handsworth
TARGETED Shops had windows smashed in Handsworth
 ?? ?? AFTERMATH Cars were set alight and overturned
AFTERMATH Cars were set alight and overturned
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? A TOWN ON FIRE Kids watch violence in Handsworth
A TOWN ON FIRE Kids watch violence in Handsworth
 ?? ?? ACTOR Cole Martin as Leon
ACTOR Cole Martin as Leon

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