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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Kaiya Marjoribanks

Historic Bill to pardon miners convicted during bitter 1980s strike announced at former pit village


Fallin was the fitting venue for the announcement of a new Bill to pardon former miners convicted of certain offences related to strike action in the 1980s.

Polmaise was the first pit in Britain to go on strike in the prelude to the national strike of 1984-85 and the last to end action.

Justice Secretary Keith Brown, also the MSP for Clackmannanshire and Dunblane met with miners’ representative Nicky Wilson at the Fallin Miners Memorial yesterday (Thursday).

The Miners’ Strike (Pardons) (Scotland) Bill follows an independent review, led by John Scott QC, into the impact of policing on Scottish communities during the 1984-85 strike.

The review recommended the Scottish Government introduce legislation to pardon miners convicted for certain matters related to the strike, subject to establishing suitable criteria.

Following a consultation, that criteria has now been established and sets out that the pardon will be available to people convicted of certain offences – such as breach of the peace – and who were participating in strike action.

The Bill, published yesterday (Thursday), does not cast doubt on decisions made by courts at the time and does not quash convictions.

Many former miners potentially eligible for the pardon are now elderly or have regrettably died given the passage in time since the strike and the Bill has been developed within an accelerated timescale to enable early introduction in the first year of the new parliamentary session.

Mr Brown said: “The miners’ strike was one of the most bitter and divisive industrial disputes in living memory. This new draft legislation will go some way to aid reconciliation – and to help heal wounds within Scotland’s mining communities.

“A collective pardon will restore dignity to those convicted, provide comfort to their families and, I hope, will bring closure to the sense of injustice members of mining communities may feel.”

The pardon was recommended by an independent review group commissioned by the Scottish Government to review the impact of policing on mining communities during the strike.

Click here for more news and sport from the Stirling area.

The Scottish Government made a public commitment in 2020 to accept the recommendation in principle and bring forward the necessary legislation. The Bill was subsequently announced in the Programme for Government.

The intention is to provide a collective symbolic pardon which recognises the disproportionate consequences suffered by many miners because of their participation in the strike and that there will be no application scheme for the pardon, with former miners self-assessing against the qualifying criteria.

  • For more coverage and reaction see Wednesday’s edition of the Stirling Observer.
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