One of the many stars of the glittering 2010 Labour intake of distinct non-apparatchiki, Ian Lavery, writes:
After thirty years of collecting dust, the
declassification of secret government papers has finally exposed Margaret
Thatcher’s and senior cabinet ministers’ true role in the 1984-85 miners’
strike.
The extent to which Mrs Thatcher and her cronies were prepared to go to
will come as no surprise to those of us who lived through the wanton
destruction of our industry and communities.
This was a government that gave serious thought
to deploying troops against a striking workforce who were fighting to protect
their communities.
Communities which had grown around the coal industry,
communities who had paid the ultimate price to feed the countries insatiable
appetite for black gold, communities which had been the backbone of the
industrial revolution, communities who had fought to make the work as safe and
secure as possible.
Many of these have not recovered from the events
which followed the strike.
The government and National Coal Board always
claimed that only 20 or so Collieries were to be closed. The NUM knew the
number was far higher despite its vehement denial by MacGregor and Thatcher.
Today shows just how little regard was actually given to the people of the
country who were deliberately misled by senior politicians and civil servants.
The painting of the miners as the aggressors and
the out and out denial of a secret hit list of more than 70 collieries
earmarked for closure are now proven as lies.
Mrs Thatcher was involved in the
wilful destruction of the coal industry and micro managed the government’s side
of the strike, prepared to use any possible measures to win – whilst lying to
the country about the scale of the closures programme and simultaneously
scheming to use the armed forces to ensure victory.
What we have seen today is the lengths that the
Tory government of the era was prepared to go to. Lying to the country and
using every tool of the state to destroy a trade union movement full of
ordinary working people who fought for the future of their communities.
This is
but a small piece of the archives, we can only wonder what papers remain
unseen, still classified and for what reason.
We could be forgiven for being confused, but this
is not a tale from the Orwellian dystopia 1984 but Britain in that year and our
communities still suffer for it now.
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