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20 YEARS ON: LEGACY OF THE MINERS' STRIKE

? | 02.02.2004 10:09 | Liverpool

If you’re working class there is nothing down for you. The working class were responsible for bringing about the present government. But now, the middle classes have hijacked that same government. Look what has happened to the miner’s kids. A lost generation. This is what is on the cards for many working class kids.

20 YEARS ON: LEGACY OF THE MINERS' STRIKE

Feb 1 2004

By Colin Wills

THE young bodies are discarded as casually as sweet papers. Crammed into wheelie bins or left in sheds, shop doorways and derelict houses.

These grim surroundings have become the last resting places of a lost generation. They should have grown up to be proud, productive men, following in their fathers’ footsteps, hacking coal from the ground. Instead at the Hope drop-in centre in Worksop – once the pulsing heart of the Nottinghamshire coalfield – the talk is only of funerals.

Twenty years after the the most bitter dispute of modern times, the 1984 miners’ strike, children and grandchildren of the defeated miners are dying. Virtually all the youngsters at Hope are victims of a drugs crisis of epidemic proportions.

Heroin addiction in Britain’s coalfields, where the pits were ruthlessly closed by Margaret Thatcher, is running at 27 per cent above the national average. In Wakefield heroin cases have soared by 3,361 per cent in four years. In South Wales drugs campaigners say the valleys are “awash with heroin.”

MP John Mann describes the situation in his Bassetlaw constituency in Nottinghamshire as “appalling.” Everyone here has lost at least one friend, their names recited quietly, the terror of their last moments recalled almost in whispers.

One was 29-year-old Kelvin Baker whose death shocked people who thought they had become unshockable.

“Kelvin? Oh yeah, they found him in a rubbish skip next to a block of flats,” says 19-year-old John Proctor, thin as a stick under his England football shirt. “He collapsed and died after shooting up. It was his mates who dumped him there. Desperation really.

“They didn’t want to phone the police ’cos a lot of drugs were being done in the house where he’d been staying and they were scared of being charged with something. Maybe manslaughter or attempted murder if they’d helped him inject.

“I heard they tried everything to bring him round. Ran a cold bath and threw him into it, burned him with a cigarette lighter to try and shock his system back to life. But it was no good. So they got him out of the house and that’s where he ended up.”

John Proctor knows all about death and funerals. “I went to Stuart Turner’s not long ago,” he says. “He was a good friend. I didn’t stay long as his mum wasn’t keen on having drug addicts hanging around. I went back later and left a bunch of flowers.”

Thirty-year-old Stuart’s death three months ago illustrates how heroin maintains its grip to the end. He was in hospital with pneumonia and kidney failure as his body finally gave up after years of heroin abuse. Yet a craving for heroin drove him to get out his hospital bed and discharge himself to get one last hit. Within 24 hours he was dead.

In the face of such events, no-one is under any illusions about the risks they run.

John Proctor is typical of many living in a community where the dream of a secure future has disappeared. The son of a miner who lost his job, John now lives with his mother, Dawn, 37, who is also a heroin addict.

They are trying to get off it together…so far unsuccessfully. Most days they survive on a prescribed heroin substitute, but they still need heroin to sleep at night. “It helps blot out the pain and makes you forget,” says Dawn.

There is much to forget in both their lives. Dawn, an attractive woman, worked in saunas and massage parlours to help finance her habit. John has been jailed three times for shoplifting and is banned from every shop in Worksop. They both need around £60 a day to feed their addictions.

Dawn has no doubt the personal disasters that have befallen so many here stem directly from the strike. “There were six pits around here,” she says. “After the strike they closed one after the other. There was no work, nothing at all. A lot of marriages broke up because of the strain of it all. Mine did. All we seemed to do was argue and fight.”

Worksop, outwardly a serene market town, is surrounded by pit villages, housing estates grouped around mine workings now landscaped and flattened. When the pits closed, a way of life that had sustained generations of families disappeared overnight

“When lads reached 16, an official from the National Coal Board would come to the school to sign them up,” said Mr Mann. “The following Monday they reported to the pit.”

And there was genuine pride in the work and a degree of togetherness unequalled in any other industry. Miners walked to the pit together, drank together, looked out for one another underground.

When the “Pit Closed” notices went up, all this evaporated. “Heroin filled the gap,” says Donna Marsh, whose son Gary, 22, is an addict.

She has paid £250 for Gary to have an implant which temporarily stops the craving. “It gives me six weeks of peace,” she says. “Six weeks of not having to worry where he is at 3am. The trouble is it wears off.” Donna, a helper at Hope, knows the real solution goes beyond implants. “The problem runs deep in a community,” she says. “When they shut the pits a whole way of life finished. These were one-industry villages and youngsters were left stranded. There was no work – and there were no role models for them either.

“When lads started down the pit they were taken out for a drink that night at the Miners’ Club by their workmates. You could call it an initiation. The older miners became their mentors. There was discipline, like being in the Army. That went when the pits closed.”

Family life was thrown into turmoil. Men who were used to being breadwinners rotted away at home. Women went out to work, often only getting the minimum wage packaging food. Couples split up and children drifted. Then the drug dealers moved in.

“We were targeted,” says Sandy Smith, who runs Hope. “No doubt about it. The dealers exploited the miners’ pain.” Heroin quickly became the drug of choice and at £5 a wrap even cheaper than cannabis or getting drunk on lager. And those who aren’t hooked came under increasing pressure every day.

“We’ve got an inner city problem without inner city resources,” says Mr Mann. In his constituency, there are 1,200 addicts in a population of 104,000. “But we are adamant we are not going to be beaten by it,” he says.

His initiatives include persuading GPs to start large-scale treatment programmes and employing two specialist nurses to visit primary schools and target “at risk” children – those with family members who are already addicts. “We may not see the benefits for some years, but in time it’s going to pay dividends,” he says.

But too many coalfields are in agony. Hope alone is dealing with 450 addicts and at least 10 have died in the last two years. “We’ve had bodies dumped everywhere you can imagine,” says Sandy. “Often their pockets have been gone through for drugs or money. Heroin is a terrible thing when it gets hold. Nothing else matters.”

Twice a week, addicts come to Hope to exchange their needles, taking away new ones in batches of 50. Some have exhausted all their veins and inject directly into their eyeballs. Those who inject into their crippled limbs risk permanent disability and even amputation

“Some of them end up in wheelchairs or on walking sticks,” says drugs campaigner Josie Potts. “You see them hobbling round town and you think, ‘This lad is either going to have his leg amputated or he will die’.”

Young Sean illustrates the desperation of a heroin addict, limping into Hope with a broken ankle after leaping from his bedroom window when his parents had locked him in. “Me mum and dad had locked me in to do my turkey – wean me off drugs, but I couldn’t cope. I was going crazy, so I opened the window and jumped out into the street.”

Sean’s dad was a miner and given the chance he would have followed in his footsteps. “My future would have been taken care of,” he says, “I wouldn’t be like I am, wasting my days.”

There are so many like Sean – not 24-hour club people, but youngsters turning to drugs to cope with what they see as a life devoid of meaning.

Another addict, Joanne, takes me to a disused house which she uses to inject. It is a terrible place, full of damp, old cushions, rotting food and litter. She came from a family of miners and can just remember a childhood which once seemed so safe, so secure.

Some schoolfriends even carried banners on marches during the strike. “Afterwards everything just seemed to collapse round here,” she says. “We were looking for any way out. Now... well, I’d sooner be dead than go on like this.”

She goes shoplifting every day to get the £50 to £80 she needs for her heroin. At 26, Joanne feels she is beyond redemption. “All I want to be is normal and to do what other people my age do,” she says. “Have a home, a nice man, a family. But, as it is, I might just as well wish for the moon.”

Every addict needs around £15,000-a-year to support their habit, which means they have to steal or shoplift £80,000 of goods which are then sold on for a fraction of their value.

The heroin-fuelled crimewave in Manton, a former pit village outside Worksop, has reached such epidemic proportions it is now known as The Bronx. One addict even stole her baby grand-daughter’s toys to get a fix.

To drive around its estates with Josie is to come face to face with a generation in pain. “See those two girls there,” she says, pointing at two youngsters crossing the road arm in arm. “Both addicts. Their children have been taken away from them. I’ve lost count of the cases where the courts have given custody to grandparents because the parents are addicts.”

Josie, 57, a miner’s wife, has seen things she will never forget working as a drug counsellor. “I went to a funeral the other day,” she says. “A lovely lad. His dad was a miner, I used to sit with him and his wife in the miners’ club. This lad...oh, it would break your heart. He was so thin, he never ate because of the drugs. Eventually his body gave up and he died of pneumonia.

“A week before he died he asked me to lend him £3.50. He said it was for his electric meter, but I knew he wanted it for heroin. ‘I’ll pay you back, Josie, I really will,’ he said, but I knew it would never happen. You might say I shouldn’t have given him the money, but I’ve seen kids on withdrawal and it’s the worst thing I’ve known. They call it ‘rattling’. It’s the right word because even their bones seem to shake.”

Yet it was so so different when the pits were bustling and families so close they went on holiday together. There were galas and festivals and street parties.

Josie has no doubt the aftermath of the 1984 strike is the cause of all this unhappiness. “It killed off a generation,” she says. “Maggie Thatcher didn’t know what a hell on earth she was creating when she shut the pits. Or maybe she did, and just didn’t care.

“I went down to Madam Tussaud’s in London a few years ago and stood in front of her dummy in all its finery.

“I know you, lady,’ I said to it. ‘And I’ll never stop hating you. You destroyed everything I loved’.”

?
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Comments

Hide the following 9 comments

sick and angry

02.02.2004 12:57

this is truly heartbreaking, i feel sick and angry, but when are all those who campaign on the 'holy trinity' of asylum seekers, anti-war and the environment going to realise that behind the scenes this country is falling apart, with poverty, alienation, violence. For many the 80;s never finished and times are still as bad. There is only going to be one benfefactor of this neglect by the left, because that is what it is, we all know who thast will be.

btw, someone should post thi to the SWP/STWC/respect central commitee, see if they really care!

concernedz


The Lost Generation..

02.02.2004 13:15

I read this self-same in the 'Daily Mirror' the other day and was, like I suppose most decent people, deeply shocked and ashamed. The Thatcher government was hell-bent on creating a great divide between those who had and those who hadn't. And that is exactly what was created. Before the Thatcher era, the class system basically was less of a problem. Naive and simple I know, but as a working class person from a very poor and working class background, I simply noticed the animosities rising again at the end of the 70's and early 80's.

There seemed to be a governmental inspired detestation of anything poor and working class at this time. We are living at this time in the detritus of these hatreds and animosities. And when looked at realistically, what happened is that those with, got more, and those already struggling got even what they didn't really have, taken from them. Then all the selfish, those who had conspired to make themselves wealthier, got all self-righteous as crime and disorder exploded. In effect, adding insult to injury.

What happened politically, as in America, is that the left was basically castrated, and any genuine left and those genuinely fighting for social justice under the banner of the left, were cast aside, and governments and society has become either right of centre or hard-right of centre, covered over with a veneer of democracy for the individual and communities. This has made Britain a curious place; at the same time both libertarian and forward thinking, AND conservative, selfish, divided and backward-looking. My view is this; when we stop arguing points politically, and see what happened in reality, we might come to a better place. What happened basically was injustice on a massive scale, systematic destruction of workers rights, unions, fair wages etc etc. We see the result of this in those communities and council estates dotted around every major city, town, area and even many of the villages, that are stricken with crime, violence, drug problems, hopelessness, animosities and embittered and disillusioned communities of every kind.

I am fed up of hearing about poverty and injustice in the rest of the world, when the savage injustice and poverty of Britain has been effectively ignored and forgotten. I am also fed up with hearing about charity, or religious institutions, or well-meaning middle class and monied types going on about injustice. None of them would know poverty or injustice if they fell over it! It is time to fight the injustice with justice, and time for all those genuinely interested and committed to tackling vast inequalities to start looking long and hard at why some people seem to have everything and someone else has nothing; and this is going on in Britain NOW!!!

Timbo O'the 'Pool


excellent post

02.02.2004 14:48

excellent post, Timbo, i really fear that it is only people who have struggled in this country who understand the nature of the beast. Imo, the fact there is no interest in campaigning on poverty , housing, isolation, etc has its roots in the collapse of the Left after the strike and the emergenceof a totally middle/even upper class direct action movement. Please, people dont say it wasnt, i was there: M11, RTS, you name it. Class was seen as not important, that we now lived in a post industrial world and priorities would be different. Some of these have been positive,, such as a concern for indigenous people, though I see it does not stretch to the white working class!}and the rejection of top down organising, but ultimately I fear they have thrown the baby out with the bath water.

a fact nearly 5,000 pensioners have died in five years across the whole of South Yorkshire
from povert, fuel poverty, abuse and neglect.

concernedz


have any of you ...

02.02.2004 16:11

ever been down a coal mine? They are flithy, nasty and dangerous places. We ought to be grateful that men no longer have to work in these conditions.

sceptic


Yes, but...

02.02.2004 17:22

Wasn't Nottinghamshire the home of the scabs who formed their own union (funded by Thatcher & Macgregor's supporters), which helped break the strike?

If so, tragic as it may be on a personal level, as 'communities', they had it coming to them. The trouble is that every working-class community has had to suffer as well because of anti-union laws.

And for a Nu-Labour MP to complain about the situation when his government have not only kept those laws but extended them, and show a belief in neo-liberal economic mumbo-jumbo which surpasses even Thatcher shows what a bunch of hypocrites and traitors they are.

TheJudge


Tories murdered working class mining communities...

02.02.2004 22:26

I lived for 18months in the North East, in County Durham, end of 1999 to May 2001. It was a former pit village, there was even a drug dealer in the village of perhaps less than a thousand people, Byers Green it was called. Though they still organised their annual village carnival, they still had their 'working men's club'. Annually there is the Durham Miners Gala every July and the best sound I ever heard was a miners brass band, these guys work in muck and sweat for hours to haul out of the ground coal and yet the pit village bands are such a sweet contrast.

I saw quite a few former pit villages that are effectively ghost towns and the Labour Government has allowed their post offices to close further destroying them, the poverty is just as extreme as any council estate here in Liverpool, kids stone the buses and stone passing cars, in fact an organisation had a centre there and used to take young people from the cities, teenagers in detention and with other problems, the tension between the local youth and these teenagers dumped into a community with no facilities or youth facilies often erupted into fights, quite sad working class youth put against one another. To be honest I don't understand the middle class illusion of living in a village they can be a lonely place to go when you know nobody as my family didn't. Quite an eye opener...

This article tells us so much, take away a person's way of life, their employment, their hope and their future and you kill not with a bullet but you might as well have. It's sad that the heroine that was encouraged to flood into Britain in the early 1980s filled the black holes in our youth's souls it happened here in Liverpool, but marujuana/weed is just doing the same, turning our kids brains to mush, tranquilising them keeping them quiet, parents giving their kids ritalin too, we've become our own prison guards and oppressors.

I also remember visiting the Parkside pit the last on Merseyside when pits came under the second attack with Hestletine in the driving seat, circa 1992/93. Indeed we, the working class, have suffered ever since for the defeat of Britain's most politicised and militant trade unionists, shame on the labour party and the TUC for their betrayal.

Kai

Kai Andersen
mail e-mail: aokai@tiscali.co.uk
- Homepage: http://groups.msn.com/SocialistLabourPartyLiverpool


They can cut down all the flowers: But they can't stop the spring. . .

03.02.2004 12:15

The pain of the miners. . .

After the power of organised working class resistance in the '70s the combination of the Labour Party and Conservative Party smashed this movement.

This is why British workers, once happily described by right wing economists "as the laziest workforce in the world" now work the longest hours in Europe for the lowest pay.

The 80s through the 90s was a period of defeat, but the movement that didn't begin in Seattle and didn't end in Genoa has shown the way forward.

One poster outrageously asks if the Steering Committees of the Socialist Workers Party, Stop the War Coalition, and RESPECT care about the miners.

In fact most of the people in all three organistations were actively expresesd solidarity with the miners.

There is alienation and despair which is precisely why we need organisations that can bind people together in action to create an alternative culture.

LEILA MANTOURA


are they opposites?

03.02.2004 13:15

In my experience those who campaign most consistently against war and racism are also those who campaign most consistently against poverty and for workers rights.

Whereas those who say 'you lot shouldn't be doing that, you should be doing this' rarely do anything themselves!

observer


Marches, Demos, Radicalism blah blah blah!!!!!! (edited!!!!!)

04.02.2004 13:08

One of the problems, one of the major problems with left politics and radicalism in Britain, is that has become watered down and it has become a 'uniform' and a stance, that certain people adopt until they get something better in life. What we see in impoverished communities across Britain is at worst, savage poverty and injustice; and what I ask, and will continue to be puzzled about, is where are all the radicals and the concerned????? Where are all the demo marchers and the banner wavers??? They seem horrendously conspicuous by their absence.

The real problems are airbrushed out of the picture; it is fine to wave placards about poverty in other parts of the world, and equally fine to challenge the racism, injustice, class systems and inequalities in other parts of the world, but when are those so vocal about nice and safe and far-off distant places, going to be vocal about the decimation of working class communities in Britain? Where are all the righteous radicals, the rebels, the outspoken politicos then?

Could it be that challenging harsh realities in Britain is too close to the knuckle, too much like reality for the lefty middle classes and the monied lefties, who are voracious in their appetite for condemning racism, poverty and class everywhere else, but are embarrasingly and dreadfully silent when it is on their own doorstep and in their own country? Would it be too much like reality to ask why middle class and monied people do not challenge poverty in Britain; would it be because the same divides and injustices they love to vocalise about in Africa, India, Indonesia, Latin America, are those very same divides and injustices that middle class people benefit from in Britain? Of course, it couldn't be? Or could it?

The answers speak for themselves, and the facts speak for themselves. The reality for many working class people, of whatever ethnic or religious community, is often a bleak one, with less opportunity and less life chances generally than someone who benefits from the wealth divides and class divides. If the whole point of challenging unequal divisions in the rest of the (poorer) world is to break down those very racist and classist systems, then why for goodness sake are the divisions not being tackled in Britain??! Would it be too much for those used to high wages, fantastic lifestyles etc etc, to pay a bit more, and campaign for a fairer minimum wage, workers rights etc etc, in Britain. It seems that it is, sadly. Oh, they'll march for days, oh they'll raise their fists in sympathy for workers etc, but ask about actually challenging the deep inequalities that means some people are paid very well, and others are paid a pittance, and there seems to be an embarrassed silence. It is a silence that loudly echoes around this nation. And it is a shameful silence.

I DO NOT want middle class 'concern' nor do I want 'sympathy', nor do I want to hear so much about poverty and injustice in other parts of the world. If you are wealthy, and you have made that wealth at someone else's expense, in one way or the other, you are either trying to put that right, or you are part of the problem. If middle class people, and I really mean those with money, power, influence etc etc, want to be radical and want to genuinely change something, you could start with tackling the divides in Britain, and then think about the rest of the world a little after.

I fear that the major problem is one of greed and selfishness. Until the basic premise is challenged that working class people can struggle by on low wages and middle class can have much better ones, all that lefty 'wine bar' radicalism and socialism is irrelevant and frankly up itself! Fair enough, if you want to be a trendy lefty and play at being Che Guevara fine, just don't think that it makes a difference and that you are changing anything by dressing down and acting all radical. We can do without that thanks. For anyone who is genuine, your journey starts, whoever you are, when you see reality, and the injustices heaped upon people in that reality.

Timbo O'The 'Pool


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