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1972
had been a torrid year for the Government. The miners inflicted a defeat
over pay, and the Tories had been forced, in the face of mass protest,
to release five dockers held in Pentonville prison. Then came Britain's
first national building workers strike.
Justice for the Shrewsbury Pickets
By
On 31 August 1972 the strike committees of
North Wales building workers’ met in the upstairs room of the Bull
& Stirrup in Chester.
This was to be a fateful day for these men. They would go on to be the
victims of one of the worst miscarriages of justice seen in Britain since
the days of the Tolpuddle Martyrs. They would be vilified and hounded
by parts of the press, convicted by a court as a deterrent to strikers,
and abandoned by their own union leaders and the TUC.
Six of them would go to prison and one of these would die later as a result
of the treatment he received while there.
The strike had begun in June 1972 on selected major building sites, the
first of these being Marks and Spencers in Liverpool. Pressure from the
rank and file soon forced the Union of Construction Allied Trades and
Technicians (UCATT) and the Transport and General Workers Union (TGWU)
to call all their members out.
The strikers wanted a 35-hour week, a national minimum wage and an end
to 'The Lump', a system of paying workers illegally, cash in hand, which
undermines union organisation and safety.
In the Bull & Stirrup, Ricky Tomlinson says, the strike committees:
" …discussed picketing in the Shrewsbury area, where many of
the big sites had still not come out.
We voted to organise a big picket for the following week, with coaches
bringing building workers from the surrounding districts."
Police outriggers escorted the coaches from site to site, and apart from
minor scuffles everything was peaceful. Most of the sites they visited
supported the strike and there were no arrests.
Des Warren was even congratulated on his conduct of a meeting by the officer
in charge, Police Superintendent Meredith, who shook his hand.
The strike ended on 15 September with the biggest pay increase ever recorded
for workers in the building industry, although it didn't remove 'The Lump'.
In October 1972, the Home Secretary Robert Carr instructed chief constables
to investigate violent picketing. Carr was responding to a dossier, almost
entirely made up of press cuttings, handed to him by the National Federation
of Building Trades Employers.
This set in train a massive operation by the police to find 'Terror Pickets'
- a term used by the press - raiding dozens of ordinary building workers'
homes and subjecting them to intense questioning.
Although we now refer to them as the Shrewsbury 24, there were actually
31 North Wales building workers charged. The first trials were in Mold
and they were used as a dress rehearsal for Shrewsbury.
Only minor charges were upheld by the jury and all the pickets walked
free. But five of those cleared were to appear again at a later trial.
In his opening address at the first of three Shrewsbury trials on 3 October
1973, prosecuting counsel, Maurice Drake QC, told the jury that the pickets
would be described as being, 'like a swarm of Apache Indians'.
One of their witnesses said he heard pickets shouting 'Kill! Kill! Kill!'.
The pickets had actually been shouting 'Kill! Kill! Kill! The Lump'.
Unlawful assembly and conspiracy to intimidate had been added to the earlier
charge of affray. The conspiracy charge, using an act of 1875, allowed
for an unlimited jail sentence.
Drake explained the incredible nature of this charge. You didn't have
to meet, you didn't even have to know each other; a conspiracy could be
arranged 'with a nod and a wink'.
Three of the pickets - Warren, Tomlinson and McKinsie Jones - were found
guilty and given prison sentences of up to nine years (three years on
each charge). McKinsie Jones hadn't even been in the Bull & Stirrup
at the time of the decision to picket the Shrewsbury sites!
At the end of the trial, and before sentencing, Des Warren and Ricky Tomlinson
spoke from the dock. Both speeches laid out clearly their thoughts on
how the trial had been set up to criminalise picketing, that it was a
political trial.
Warren told the court:
Politically motivated interference by governments acting on behalf of
and under political pressure from employers now means that no trade unionist
can enter freely into negotiations with employers. They cannot withdraw
their labour - the only thing they possess as a bargaining lever - without
being accused of setting out to wreck the economy, of challenging the
law. The building employers, by their contempt of the laws governing safety
regulations, are guilty of causing the deaths and maiming of workers -
yet they are not dealt with by the courts.
The pickets had become victims of the government's push to shackle union
activity, and they had every right to believe, as they were led away,
that the movement would fight to get them out.
The leaders of UCATT and TGWU, though, had abandoned the pickets. They
had refused them representation at the outset of the trial. And now three
had been jailed, they wouldn't support the calls for action to get them
released, nor even appeals against sentence.
Although hampered by the response from trade union leaders, the groundswell
of support for the pickets gained momentum. At the time of the trials
there had been industrial action in support, notably from the Liverpool
dockers. And in early 1974 workers stopped work in London and Glasgow,
and 25 major building sites in Manchester.
Pending appeals Warren and Tomlinson (McKinsie Jones having been released)
were allowed bail in June. When, in October, they were sent back to prison,
with the appeal court verdict that the sentences were a deterrent to others,
workers on building sites all over the country spontaneously walked out,
only to be told to get back to work by their unions.
In early 1975 Lancashire building workers marched from Wigan to London
calling for a general strike for the release of the two pickets still
in jail.
By this time a Labour Government had been elected and the trade union
leaders did not want to "rock the boat". The TUC did meet with
the Home Secretary, Roy Jenkins, only to be rejected. Jack Jones, General
Secretary of the TGWU, declared that the General Council of the TUC would
not even consider the call for a general strike.
Warren and Tomlinson continued their sentences, Des in 14 different jails,
encountering squalid conditions and hostility from prison staff in most
of them. As part of their campaign to prove their innocence and that they
were political prisoners, both men went on hunger strike and 'on the blanket'
for long periods, and refused to do prison work. Warren, in particular,
was singled out for punishment, with many months of solitary confinement
and cuts in visits from his wife, Elsa, and the children.
When Tomlinson came out of jail in July 1975, he joined the campaign for
the release of Warren but, once again, there was a lack of support from
the trade union leaders.
Des Warren served all but four months of his sentence and was released
on 5 August 1976.
Warren died on 24 April 2004 of Parkinson's disease. He laid the blame
for his illness squarely on the ‘liquid cosh’, the tranquillising
drugs administered to difficult prisoners like him while in prison.
The Shrewsbury Pickets Campaign was renewed in August 2006. The demand
is justice for the pickets, and a public inquiry to expose the real conspiracy.
There are still many questions that remain unanswered about the events
surrounding the Shrewsbury trials, not least the role of MI5.
Such a campaign has a clear relevance for workers in today's casualised
construction industry with its appalling safety record.
For further information on the Justice for the Shrewsbury Pickets Campaign
contact
phone 07907 307 835 or look at
References from:
- Des Warren, The Key to My Cell, New Park Publications (1982), to be
republished in May 2007 by Living History Library.
- Ricky Tomlinson, Ricky, Time Warner Paperbacks (2003).
- Peter Hain, Political Trials in Britain, From the Past to the Present
Day, Penguin (1985).
- Jim Arnison, The Shrewsbury Three, Strikes, Pickets and 'Conspiracy',
Lawrence and Wishart (1974).
The reprint of Des Warren’s autobiography ‘The Key to My
Cell’ is to be launched at the Writing on the Wall (WOW) Festival,
History Day, Tuesday 15 May 4.00-5.30 pm, at Dean Walters Building (JMU)
Upper Duke St.
Joe Sim, Professor of Criminology at JMU, will discuss the use of legal
drugs by the state to control prisoners. Steve Tombs, Professor of Sociology
at JMU, will discuss corporate crime and the construction industry today.
Comment left by john walker on 6th November, 2008 at 16:33 capatalist britain! it is a disgrace and everyone should strive to clear their name. the lump still goes on with employers still trying everything to deny workers basic rights.union activity is frowned upon especially if unoficial and leads to people like myself to be put on blacklists and denying us employment.your struggle is an inspiration to me .
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