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Former miners can finally speak the truth about Orgreave, says inquiry chair

about 9 hours ago
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Former miners will finally get the chance to speak the truth about their experiences after four decades of silence during a public inquiry into infamous clashes with police at Orgreave, the inquiry’s chair has said.Pete Wilcox, the bishop of Sheffield, said only an inquiry could help South Yorkshire move on from the events of 18 June 1984, when striking miners unexpectedly found themselves in a pitched battle against thousands of police officers brought in from forces across the UK.The Hillsborough-style inquiry, officially launched by Sarah Jones, the policing minister, in parliament on Thursday, will examine how 6,000 police officers were deployed to a picket at Orgreave coking plant three months into a National Union of Miners strike over planned pit closures.About 8,000 people – miners and their families – were on the receiving end of what was described as heavy-handed policing, with witnesses and images from the day detailing how mounted police charged at the pickets and hit them with batons.Many were injured, some seriously, but it was the moral injury that the injustice caused in the minds of South Yorkshire miners and wider working-class communities that was the lasting effect.

This was particularly true in the following days, when the government of Margaret Thatcher and South Yorkshire police influenced the media narrative,Some former miners have since spoken about feeling outraged and despondent that their experiences from that day were misrepresented,Compounding matters, 95 miners were charged with rioting, in a case that ultimately collapsed after the police’s evidence was found to be unreliable and, in some instances, fabricated,It was described by the barrister Michael Mansfield as “the biggest frame-up ever”,All this led to mistrust in authorities, particularly the police, for generations – a situation that has still not been resolved.

Wilcox said it was not right to say that the public consciousness had moved on since the miners’ strike,“Nobody in South Yorkshire or in the former mining communities of the north-east is saying we’ve all moved on,It’s easy to say that if you are not part of a community that was impacted in 1984,“The point of this inquiry is to enable communities to move on which have not been able to move on since the miners’ strike,”Evidence will be especially difficult to gather, however, given that many people who witnessed or participated in the events at Orgreave have since died.

“I’m sorry to say that’s true,” said Wilcox, who has spent years speaking to mining communities and who in 2018 tried to persuade the then home secretary, Amber Rudd, to launch an independent public inquiry, but was rebuffed.“In a sense it might have been most effective for this inquiry to have been held 30 years ago, but you can’t turn the clock back.We are where we are.And as a matter of fact, there are still many, many people who are frustrated that they have not yet been able to put their story on the record.“So there are many people who are really happy that the moment has come when they will be able to give their account of what happened at Orgreave.

And we will try to be creative about the way in which we source witness testimony and to do it in a way that is trauma informed.“Because of their age, many both former miners and indeed former police officers, some of them are in a state of frailty and we will want to be extremely sensitive to the needs of individuals in the way in which we get their story on the record.”The bishop said he did not think there was a risk that witnesses’ recollections would not be accurate 42 years on from such a traumatic day.“For one thing, we won’t just be relying on oral testimony.There is a great deal of documentary evidence and audio files and video files.

And we will, because it’s a statutory public inquiry, be able to compel evidence, so we’ll have access to documents that are currently embargoed or restricted.We will be able to give a much fuller picture based on documentary evidence than has previously been available.And that’ll help us to triangulate, I suppose, with witness statements to make sure that we’re telling a truthful story.“But actually, although as a general rule it’s true to say that human memory fades, when you’ve lived with a traumatic experience, it remains vivid for you.And I don’t think we’re going to encounter a great deal of misleading memory.

”The inquiry will rely in part on police records, some of which have since been destroyed, but Wilcox said he felt encouraged that police would cooperate with the inquiry in the way they are legally compelled to do,“We do know that the Northumbria police did destroy some documents within the last 12 months, actually, so the timing is excruciatingly unfortunate,We understand the reasons that they’ve provided for why they’ve done that,But most police forces, as far as we are aware, haven’t destroyed relevant documentation,And I know that South Yorkshire police have not only retained their documentary evidence, they have been digitising it in readiness for this inquiry.

”Wilcox urged anyone with recollections of the events to contact the inquiry.He said his hope was that the inquiry “will provide answers to some of the questions with which, particularly former miners and those in former mining communities have been living for the past 40 years.“Because if we can provide some answers, that will, I think, help to resolve the trauma that has not yet been resolved in those places.”
societySee all
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Starmer vows to ‘fight’ social media firms to protect children from addiction

Keir Starmer has promised a “fight” with social media companies amid efforts to limit children’s use of mobile phones, tablets and TVs, as new official guidance recommends children under five spend no more than an hour a day on screens.The guidance, developed by a panel led by the children’s commissioner, Rachel de Souza and children’s health expert Prof Russell Viner, advises screen time for children under two should be avoided other than for shared activities.Ministers are also considering Australia-style measures to limit or ban social media for under-16s.Speaking at a school in south London about the new guidance, the prime minister said: “When there’s a lot going on, when children are having a tantrum, trying to find something to distract them is an obvious thing, and I don’t think parents and carers have had any guidance at all yet about what would be appropriate, what might be best.”The government is consulting on potential age restrictions on social media and other services, such as gaming sites and AI chatbots, as well as restrictions on addictive design features and risky functionalities, and better support for parents and families

about 15 hours ago
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Keep under-fives’ screen time to no more than an hour a day, UK advice says

Children under five should spend no more than an hour a day on screens, new government advice says.Screen time for children under two should be avoided except for shared activities encouraging interaction, families are advised.In addition, the government is considering Australia-style measures to limit or ban social media for under-16s.The guidance was developed by a panel led by the children’s commissioner, Rachel de Souza, and the children’s health expert Prof Russell Viner.Keir Starmer said the guidance would help families keep children safe and ensure they built healthy habits with screens

about 19 hours ago
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More than 6m vapes and pods discarded weekly in UK despite single-use ban, study finds

More than 6m vapes and vape pods are still being discarded every week in the UK, with waste management companies warning the sheer volume continues to strain recycling systems despite the ban on disposable e-cigarettes.According to research by the recycling campaign group Material Focus, the 6.3m vapes and pods thrown away each week in 2025 represented a 23% reduction from the previous year.This suggests the ban on sales of single-use vapes that came into effect on 1 June 2025 has had an impact on levels of waste, alongside a 31% drop in the number of vapes bought each week.However, the volume of waste is still creating problems

about 20 hours ago
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NHS bosses say resident doctors’ strike will cause ‘maximum harm’

NHS bosses have accused resident doctors of seeking to cause “maximum harm” to patients by striking for six days next month over pay and jobs.Wes Streeting has given resident – formerly junior – doctors in England until 2 April to reconsider their rejection on Wednesday of his “generous” offer to end the dispute. It would have given them £700m in extra pay over the next three years.The British Medical Association’s decision to withdraw from talks with the government and NHS chiefs aimed at settling the long-running dispute has sparked a war of words.Glen Burley, NHS England’s financial reset and accountability director, said during NHS England’s board meeting on Thursday that the BMA’s decision was “really disappointing for patients

1 day ago
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Spanish woman who won legal battle for right to euthanasia has assisted death

A Spanish woman who spent months fighting her father for the right to euthanasia after being sexually assaulted and becoming paraplegic has finally ended her life on her own terms by means of an assisted death.Noelia Castillo, 25, had struggled with psychiatric illness since she was a teenager and tried to kill herself in October 2022 after being sexually assaulted. The attempt left her in constant pain and using a wheelchair. Eighteen months later, she used Spain’s euthanasia law, which was introduced in 2021, to secure permission to end her life.But her attempts to obtain euthanasia had been opposed by her father and by Christian Lawyers, an ultra‑conservative advocacy group that had supported him

1 day ago
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Labour failing to shift power from Whitehall to local areas, analysis finds

Keir Starmer’s drive to overhaul public services is failing to live up to its aims of shifting power from Whitehall to local areas, a report from the Institute for Government (IfG) has found.Last summer, the government set out its three guiding principles for reform aimed at making public services such as the NHS, court system and children’s social care easier to access and better at helping people.The objectives were to make public services “organised around people’s lives”, to improve outcomes by focusing on prevention of problems, and devolving power to local areas that understand the needs of their communities best.However, the IfG’s analysis found that none of these were on course to happen by the next election, which is due by summer 2029.Stuart Hoddinott, a public services expert at the IfG who wrote the report, said: “Our assessment is that by the end of this parliament, on the government’s current trajectory, public services will be more centralised, integration will have slowed or even reversed, and a measurable shift towards prevention will not have occurred

1 day ago
businessSee all
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Ministers should ‘start doing stuff’ to help farmers and cut fuel costs, says Asda boss

about 11 hours ago
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‘It’s fired people up’: support grows, including within Labor, for new gas tax to curb wartime profits

about 12 hours ago
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Blink and miss: Trump’s tactic of threats first and U-turn later is proving stale in Iran war

about 12 hours ago
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UK car production falls 17% as industry warns of ‘worrying’ decline

about 14 hours ago
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Almost half a million Lloyds customers had personal data exposed in IT glitch

about 14 hours ago
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Five firms including Autotrader and Just Eat investigated over fake review failings

about 15 hours ago