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Labour to campaign for ‘Justice for the Coalfields’

Labour will today (Wednesday29th January 2014) launch the ‘Justice for the Coalfields’ campaign to urge Conservative Ministers to begin to put right the wrongs within coalfield communities.

Earlier this month newly-released cabinet papers revealed that the Thatcher Government had a secret plan to close 75 pits at the cost of some 65,000 jobs; that the Government did seek to influence police tactics to escalate the dispute; and that they actively considered declaring a state of emergency and
deploying the Army to defeat the miners and unions.

Labour is now urging Ministers to take the following action:

· Make a formal apology for the actions of the Government during the time of the strike

· Set out all details of the interactions between the Government and the police at the time

· Release all information about Government-police communications around Orgreave, with a proper investigation which might go a little way to  rebuild public confidence.

Labour believes this must happen before the 30th Anniversary of Orgreave on June 18th this year.

On Wednesday 29th January Labour’s Shadow Minister for the Cabinet Office Michael Dugher will raise this in the House of Commons, challenging Francis Maude to make an apology and commit to these actions.

PHOTO Justice for the Coalfields PHOTO

Michael Dugher MP, Labour’s Shadow Minister for the Cabinet Office, said:

“For those of us who lived through the strike and who saw the events and impact they had first hand, what was revealed in the cabinet papers may not come as a surprise.  But it is no less shocking to consider that, far from being neutral as was claimed at the time, it is clear that the Government took a deliberately calculated political approach guided by a complete hostility to the coalfield communities.

“That is why I am calling for justice for the coalfields.

“Ministers may want to sweep these events under the carpet, but the scars of the dispute and the subsequent closure programme remain on the memories, communities and landscapes of all coalfield
communities. They must now apologise and deliver transparency to begin to foster reconciliation with the coalfield communities.

Perhaps we could add another action to the ones above and that would be to remove the statue of Thatcher from the halls of parliament.
Ed.