The Sunday Post (Dundee)

‘Dad would be fighting for justice’

Mickmcgahe­yjnr oncompensa­tion forarreste­dminers

- By Marion Scott CHIEF REPORTER

The son of respected miners’ leader Mick Mcgahey says his father would today be backing the campaign to win compensati­on for those unfairly arrested and convicted in the 1984 strike.

Mick Mcgahey Jr believes his father, an intellectu­al firebrand and driving force in the National Union of Mineworker­s, would welcome the pardon being given to the men but also be calling for proper compensati­on after they lost redundancy payments, pensions and had their chances of working again undermined by a criminal conviction.

The Miners’ Strike ( Pardons) ( Scotland) Bill was unanimousl­y backed by MSPS last month and will receive a more detailed scrutiny in parliament on Tuesday. But campaigner­s, led by former Scots Labour leader Richard Leonard MSP, say a pardon is not enough.

Mc G a h e y Jr said: “There is no doubt in my mind at all, dad would be fighting to clear the names of all the miners convicted in the strike, and he would be demanding proper compensati­on for the loss of their future too.

“The tactics that were used against the miners were clearly very wrong. Those men were fighting against the state, and we know all kinds of dirty tricks were used. The miners and their families, the women and children who bore the brunt of what happened, had their future stolen from them. It’s only right they are compensate­d for that. What was done to those men was one of the worst injustices in Scottish history.”

His father, who died from emphysema at 73 in 1999, was key figure in the NUM. A lifelong Communist from Lanarkshir­e, he brought intellectu­al rigour and passion to the union, where he was widely respected. A monument to him stands at Cambuslang and he remains a working-class hero to many, famous for his speeches and sayings, including: “The bosses will stop chasing you when you stop running.”

Father and son were both miners, and, after being arrested repeatedly during the 1984 strike, Mcgahey Jr said he suffered for from being blackliste­d. He said: “I was arrested seven times. I suppose it was hard to escape being Mick Mcgahey’s son.

“Some of the worst scenes we endured were orchestrat­ed by the government, and the police and courts were aiding them. The government felt the local police weren’t being hard enough, so they moved in officers from other areas.”

After the year- old strike ended, many felt discarded as, one by one, the pits closed down. Mcgahey Jr said: “I’d worked at Bilston Glen and, after the strike, when I was still in my late-20s, I suffered four or five years of being blackliste­d from building or engineerin­g jobs. Many miners never worked again and their families suffered. I was lucky – I finally got a job as an NHS porter and worked at the Astley Ainsley Hospital for 27 years before I retired a couple of years ago.

“But many miners in their 50s never worked again. Those who were convicted lost their redundancy and pensions. Their future was stolen from them and their families.

“It was a huge injustice that is still being felt today. I’m fully behind the campaign to have conviction­s scrapped and compensati­on paid to everyone who suffered, including the families of those miners who took their lives as a result of what was done to them.”

In 2020, the Scottish Government said it would pardon the miners arrested in 1984 after an independen­t review. Humza Yousaf, then Scottish Justice Secretary, said the planned legislatio­n would deliver a collective and posthumous pardon to help provide closure to mining communitie­s and the officers involved.

“This was a bitter and divisive dispute,” he told MSPS. “Although three decades have passed, scars from the experience­s still run deep. In some areas of the country, the sense of being hurt and being wronged remains corrosive.”

 ?? ?? NUM leader Mick Mcgahey
NUM leader Mick Mcgahey

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