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{{Short description|1979 police killing of a protestor in London}}
'''Clement Blair Peach''' (25 March 1946 - 23 April 1979) was a [[New Zealand]]-born teacher who was murdered by the police, during an anti-racism demonstration in west [[London]]. At the time he was teaching at a [[special education|special needs]] school in east London, and was an active member of the [[Socialist Teachers' Association]] within the [[National Union of Teachers]], and a member of the [[Socialist Workers Party (Britain)|Socialist Workers' Party]].
{{Featured article}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Blair Peach
| image = Blair Peach.jpg
| landscape = yes
| alt = Peach, shown head and shoulders, with black hair and a beard; looking downwards
| birth_name = Clement Blair Peach
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1946|03|25}}
| birth_place = [[Napier, New Zealand]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1979|04|24|1946|03|25|df=yes}}
| death_place = [[Southall]], London, England
| death_cause = [[Head trauma]]
| occupation = Teacher
}}
'''Clement Blair Peach''' (25 March 1946 – 24 April 1979) was a New Zealand teacher who was killed during an anti-racism demonstration in [[Southall]], London, England. A campaigner and activist against the [[Far-right politics in the United Kingdom|far right]], in April 1979 Peach took part in an [[Anti-Nazi League]] demonstration in Southall against a [[National Front (UK)|National Front]] election meeting in [[Southall Town Hall|the town hall]] and was hit on the head, probably by a member of the [[Special Patrol Group]] (SPG), a specialist unit within the [[Metropolitan Police Service]]. He died in hospital that night.


An investigation by Commander John Cass of the Metropolitan Police's [[Complaints Investigation Bureau]] concluded that Peach had been killed by one of six SPG officers, and others had preserved their silence to obstruct his investigation. The report was not released to the public, but was available to John Burton, the [[Coroner#England and Wales|coroner]] who conducted the [[Inquests in England and Wales|inquest]]; excerpts from a leaked copy were also published in ''[[The Leveller]]'' and ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' in early 1980. In May 1980 the jury in the inquest arrived at a verdict of [[death by misadventure]], although press and some pressure groups—notably the [[National Council for Civil Liberties]]—expressed concern that no clear answers had been provided, and at the way Burton conducted the inquest.
== Life ==
Peach was born in New Zealand. He studied at [[Victoria University of Wellington]] and was for a time co-editor of the ''Argot'' literary magazine with his flatmates [[Dennis List]] and David Rutherford. He worked as a fireman and as a hospital orderly in New Zealand before moving to London in 1969. He became a teacher at the Phoenix School in [[Bow, London|Bow]], [[East (London sub region)|East London]], working there from 1969 until his death 10 years later.<ref name=irr>[http://www.irr.org.uk/2009/april/bw000024.html Remembering Blair Peach: 30 years on], Chris Searles, Institute of Race Relations. 23 April 2009</ref>.


Celia Stubbs, Peach's partner, campaigned for the Cass report to be released and for a full public inquiry. An inquiry was rejected, but in 1988 the Metropolitan Police paid £75,000 compensation to Peach's family. In 2009 [[Ian Tomlinson]] died after he was struck from behind by a member of the [[Territorial Support Group]], the SPG's successor organisation; the parallels in the deaths proved to be the catalyst in the release of the Cass report to the public. The Metropolitan Police commissioner, [[Paul Stephenson (police officer)|Sir Paul Stephenson]], released the report and supporting documentation. He also offered an official apology to Peach's family.
==Activism==
Peach was an active member of the East London Teachers' Association, a branch of the [[National Union of Teachers]], and became its president in the year before his death.<ref name=irr/> In 1974, he was charged with threatening behaviour after challenging a local publican's refusal to serve black customers, but acquitted.<ref name=irr/>


The policing of the demonstration in Southall damaged community relations in the area. Since Peach's death the Metropolitan Police have been involved in a series of incidents and poorly conducted investigations—the 1993 [[murder of Stephen Lawrence]], the [[death of Jean Charles de Menezes]] in 2005, the botched [[2006 Forest Gate raid]] and the death of Tomlinson—all of which tarnished the image of the service. Peach's death has been remembered in the music of [[the Pop Group]], [[Ralph McTell]] and [[Linton Kwesi Johnson]]; the [[National Union of Teachers]] set up the Blair Peach Award for work for equality and diversity issues and a school in Southall is named after him.
Peach became a campaigner and [[activist]] against [[far right]] and [[neo-Nazi]] organisations. He attended a demonstration held by the [[Anti-Nazi League]] outside the town hall in [[Southall]] on Monday 23 April 1979, [[St George's Day]], joining 3,000 protesters against a [[British National Front|National Front]] meeting taking place in the town hall that day, in the run-up to the [[1979 UK general election]]. The demonstration was attended by over 2,500 police, and became violent - over 40 people, including 21 police, were injured; 300 were arrested.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8119212.stm Blair Peach: A 30-year campaign], BBC News, 25 June 2009]</ref> Peach was knocked unconscious by police in a side street and died the next day in [[Ealing hospital]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/23/newsid_2523000/2523959.stm 1979: Teacher dies in Southall race riots] BBC On This Day, 23 April.</ref> Another demonstrator, [[Clarence Baker]] - a singer of the reggae band [[Misty in Roots]], remained in a [[coma]] for five months.<ref>[http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=17687 Blair Peach: Killed By Police], ''Socialist Worker'', 21 April 2009.</ref>
{{TOClimit|3}}


==Background==
Days after his death, 10,000 marched past the place where he collapsed. Thousands also visited his body at "lying in state" at the [[Dominion Theatre]], and thousands more attended his funeral.<ref>[http://www.irr.org.uk/2009/april/ha000025.html]</ref>
===Blair Peach===
Clement Blair Peach was born in [[Napier, New Zealand|Napier]], New Zealand, on 25 March 1946, to Clement and Janet Peach.{{sfn|May|2012}}{{sfn|"Blair Peach Gravestone" ''Getty Images''}} He was one of three brothers, the others being Roy and Philip; the former was a solicitor and led the family's legal campaign after Blair's death.{{sfn|Peach|2010|p=24}} Blair was schooled at Colenso College, then studied education and psychology at the [[Victoria University of Wellington]],{{sfn|May|2012}}{{sfn|Manson|1980|p=14}} where he co-edited the ''Argot'' literary magazine with his flatmate [[Dennis List]] and David Rutherford.{{sfn|Wright|2008|p=185}}{{sfn|Timmins|1980b|p=2}} During his studies Peach visited Britain and liked the country. After graduating he was employed in several temporary jobs, but was turned down for [[Compulsory military training in New Zealand|compulsory military training]] for having an "unsuitable character".{{sfn|"The life of Blair Peach", ''The Guardian''}} He emigrated to Britain in 1969 and was soon employed as a teacher at the Phoenix [[special needs]] school in [[Bow, London|Bow]], [[east London]].{{sfn|May|2012}} In 1970 he entered a long-term relationship with Celia Stubbs; they had first met in New Zealand in 1963 when she was visiting the country. Peach helped raise Stubbs's two daughters from her previous relationship,{{sfn|"The life of Blair Peach", ''The Guardian''}} and the couple regarded each other as husband and wife.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=9}}


Peach was politically active and joined the [[Socialist Workers Party (UK)|Socialist Workers' Party]] (SWP), Socialist Teachers' Association and the local branch of the [[National Union of Teachers]].{{sfn|May|2012}} He was also a committed opponent of racism and was active in the [[Anti-Nazi League]].{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=5}} He had been arrested previously when campaigning on political issues,{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979}} and in 1974 he was charged with threatening behaviour after challenging a local publican's refusal to serve black customers; he was acquitted.{{sfn|Searle|1979}}
Public reaction to Peach's death, and underlying racial tensions, ultimately led to the [[1981 Brixton riot]] and a public inquiry by [[Lord Scarman]].<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2009/04/28/southall_rising_feature.shtml Southall Rising], BBC London.</ref>


==Inquest==
===Southall===
{{Location map|Greater London|label=Southall|mark=red_pog.svg |lat=51.5121|long=-0.3779|width=200|float=right|caption=Southall, London}}
A team of 30 detectives from the Metropolitan Police, headed by Commander [[John Cass]], conducted an internal investigation of Peach's death, but the report of the investigation was never published, and the [[coroner]] did not allow details to be submitted as evidence at the [[inquest]]. The inquest [[jury]] returned a verdict of death by [[misadventure]] on 27 May 1980, prompting Peach's girlfriend, Celia Stubbs, to claim the police constable who allegedly administered the fatal blows had got off "scot-free".<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/27/newsid_3023000/3023595.stm 1980: Peach death was 'misadventure'], BBC On This Day, 27 May.</ref> She continued to campaign for many years, unsuccessfully, for a public inquiry into his death. Eleven witnesses said they had seen members of the [[Metropolitan Police]] [[Special Patrol Group]] (SPG) hit Peach.<ref name=BBCApril13>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/317775.stm Blair Peach inquiry ruled out], BBC News, 13 April 1999.</ref> No one was ever charged, but it was said that he had fallen to a blow from a rubberized [[police radio]].<ref>[http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10560632 Activists to mark death of teacher], New Zealand Herald, 9 March 2009.</ref> The Metropolitan Police Service reached an out-of-court settlement in 1989 with Peach's brother.<ref name=BBCApril13/> In June 2009, the [[Metropolitan Police Authority]] unanimously decided to publish the original internal police inquiry into Blair Peach's death by the end of the year.<ref>[http://www.mpa.gov.uk/committees/mpa/2009/090625-agm/minutes/?qu=Blair%20Peach&sc=2&ht=1 Minutes of MPA meeting 25 June 2009]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8118748.stm Blair Peach death secrecy review], BBC News, 25 June 2009.</ref> The [[Crown Prosecution Service]] are reviewing the internal report and will advice police as to whether any further action should be taken.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8412741.stm|title= CPS to review 1979 protest death|date=14 December 2009|publisher=BBC News|accessdate=14 December 2009}}</ref>
As a result of the population transfers after the 1947 [[partition of India]] over ten million people were impoverished. From the late 1950s a significant number of them relocated. Many Sikhs and Hindus left the subcontinent to settle in [[Greater London]], particularly [[Southall]], where shortages of workers at factories, and the employment prospects at nearby [[Heathrow Airport]] meant jobs were easily obtainable.{{sfn|Richman|1999|p=35}} Some of the early arrivals found work at the R. Woolf and Co Rubber factory; by 1965 all the lower level workers were from Poland or the Indian subcontinent.{{sfn|Fox|1995|pp=304–305}}{{efn|The manager of the factory had served alongside Sikh troops during the Second World War and was happy to employ them.{{sfn|Chaudhary|2018}}}} Racial discrimination in the workplace was common; 85 per cent of those Asian workers who had been given entry into the UK on the basis of their education or training were employed only in unskilled or semi-skilled roles. Kennetta Hammond Perry, in her history of post-war immigration, identifies the reasons as being "in part because of perceptions about their level of competence and stereotypes about their ability to speak English".{{sfn|Hammond Perry|2015|p=232}} Indian workers also faced discrimination from the white-dominated [[Trade unions in the United Kingdom|trade unions]], and so formed their own organisation, the [[Indian Workers' Association]] (IWA).{{sfn|Richman|1999|p=35}}


During local elections of the 1960s anti-immigration rhetoric was used by some candidates, successfully in many cases.{{sfn|Karapin|1999|pp=431–432}} Smaller [[right-wing politics|right-wing]] parties used immigration as a platform on which to stand, including in Southall.{{sfn|Karapin|1999|p=442}} In the local elections of May 1964, the anti-immigration [[British National Party (1960)|British National Party]] (BNP) polled 15 per cent of the vote in Southall;{{sfn|Butler|King|1965|p=354}} in the [[1964 United Kingdom general election|general election that October]] the BNP leader, [[John Bean (politician)|John Bean]], received 9.1 per cent in the [[Southall (UK Parliament constituency)|Southall constituency]].{{sfn|Butler|King|1965|p=366}} Bean won 7.4 per cent of the vote at the [[1966 United Kingdom general election|1966 general election]].{{sfn|Butler|King|1966|p=261}} The BNP's successor, the [[National Front (UK)|National Front]], recorded 4.4 per cent of the vote at the [[1970 United Kingdom general election|1970 general election]].{{sfn|Butler|Pinto-Duschinsky|1971|pp=407, 410}}
==Special Patrol Group==
An investigation by ''[[The Guardian]]'' newspaper revealed the discovery of "unauthorised weapons" in SPG lockers in [[Barnes police station]] (including a lead-weighted rubber cosh); the suspension of members of the SPG; the growing of a beard by one SPG member when he had been clean shaven on 23 April, and the shaving off of a moustache by another who had sported one at the demonstration, when SPG officers attended an ID parade; the refusal of another SPG officer to attend an ID parade; the dry cleaning of uniforms before they had been inspected.
<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/.../2009/.../blair-peach-killing-cover-up</ref>


In June 1976 the racist murder of Gurdip Singh Chaggar in Southall—outside the offices of the IWA—led to the former chairman of the National Front, [[John Kingsley Read]], stating "one down, a million to go".{{sfn|Gilroy|2004|p=174}}{{sfn|Cram|2016|p=106}}{{efn|Reid was later charged under the [[Race Relations Act 1965]], but was acquitted.{{sfn|Cram|2016|p=106}}}} Chaggar's murder led to the formation of the Southall Youth Movement (SYM) to challenge the rise in racism and attacks from the National Front.{{sfn|Chaudhary|2018}}{{sfn|Waters|2018|p=87}}{{sfn|Puri|2015}} Rioting in the area took place between police and Asian youths and members of Peoples Unite, a similar group to the SYM, but consisting of young Afro-Caribbeans.{{sfn|Baumann|1996|p=58}}
==Memorials==
A [[primary school]] in [[Southall]] was later named after Blair Peach.<ref>[http://www.ealing.gov.uk/services/education/schools/primary_schools/blair_peach_primary_school Blair Peach Primary School<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


===Special Patrol Group===
"Reggae Fi Peach", a song on [[Linton Kwesi Johnson]]'s album ''[[Bass Culture]]'', chronicles the death of Blair Peach in the form of [[dub poetry]].<ref>[http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/discography/index.jsp?JSESSIONID=LzhTKTYFWyZLjwxQ2RhfDGzG0jJq5tLTKvSCYg6p9TbgwFXv0vn4!88151879&pid=3410&aid=326052 Billboard]</ref><ref name=SA/> [[The Ruts]] commemorated the death in the tune "Jah War".<ref name=SA>[http://socialistaotearoa.blogspot.com/2009/03/reggae-for-blair-peach-remembering-kiwi.html Reggae for Blair Peach] by Socialist Aoterearoa Organisation blog</ref> The [[2 Tone]] album ''The 2 Tone Story'' is dedicated to his memory.<ref name=SA/> [[Hazel O'Connor]] wrote "Calls the Tune" in his memory.<ref name=SA/>
The [[Special Patrol Group]] (SPG) was formed in 1961 as a specialist squad within the [[Metropolitan Police]].{{efn|The original name was the Special Patrol Group Unit; this was renamed Special Patrol Group in 1965.{{sfn|Joyce|2010|p=186}}}} It provided a mobile, centrally controlled reserve of [[Police uniforms and equipment in the United Kingdom|uniformed]] officers which supported local areas, particularly when policing serious crime and civil disturbances.{{sfn|"History of the Metropolitan Police: Special Patrol Group". ''Metropolitan Police Service''}} The SPG comprised [[police officer]]s capable of working as disciplined teams preventing [[public disorder]], targeting areas of serious crime, carrying out [[stop and search]]es, or providing a response to [[Terrorism|terrorist]] threats.{{sfn|Brain|2010|p=13}}{{sfn|Waddington|1994|p=26}} In 1978 there were 1,347 SPG members in forces across the UK, 204 of them in the Metropolitan Police Service. They were divided into six units, each of which contained three [[Sergeant#United Kingdom|sergeants]] and 30 [[Constable#United Kingdom|constables]]. Each unit was commanded by an [[Inspector#United Kingdom|inspector]].{{sfn|Rollo|1980|pp=174, 204}}

The use of the SPG proved controversial to some. It was involved in the [[Red Lion Square disorders]], when [[Kevin Gately]], a student demonstrating against a National Front march, was killed from a blow to the head from a blunt instrument; the perpetrator was never identified. Accusations were made that the police were inappropriately violent towards those demonstrating.{{sfn|Joyce|2010|p=186}}{{sfn|Joyce|Wain|2014|p=282}} The former [[chief constable]], [[Tim Brain]], writes "their critics viewed them with suspicion as a force within a force"; the Metropolitan Police history observes that "their presence sometimes came to assume unwanted symbolic significance".{{sfn|"History of the Metropolitan Police: Special Patrol Group". ''Metropolitan Police Service''}} The former chief constable [[Geoffrey Dear, Baron Dear|Geoffrey Dear]] states that the SPG "might apparently solve one problem but in its wake create another of aggravated relationships between minority groups and the police in general".{{sfn|Kettle|Hodges|1982|p=94}}

The SPG was disbanded in 1986 and, replaced by District Support Units (DSU).{{sfn|Joyce|2010|p=186}}{{sfn|Waddington|1994|p=26}}{{efn|Officers in one unit beat three black youths and then conspired to [[Perverting the course of justice|pervert the course of justice]].{{sfn|Waddington|1994|p=26}}}} After receiving bad press, the DSU were replaced by the [[Territorial Support Group]] in January 1987.{{sfn|"Territorial Support Group". ''Metropolitan Police Service''}}

==23 April 1979==
[[File:Southall-old-town-hall-and-fire-station.jpg|thumb|upright=1|left|alt=A large Georgian-era building with a white portico|The old Southall town hall, where the National Front rally took place]]
In the run-up to the [[1979 United Kingdom general election|1979 general election]], the National Front announced that it would hold a meeting at [[Southall Town Hall]] on 23 April 1979, [[St George's Day]]. [[Southall (UK Parliament constituency)|Southall]] was to be one of 300 parliamentary seats for which the organisation put up candidates.{{sfn|"National Front fields almost 300 candidates". ''The Guardian''}} Prior to the Southall meeting, similar events had resulted in clashes with anti-racist protesters, including in [[Islington]], [[north London]], on 22 April, and in [[Leicester]] the following day. At both events, police had been injured trying to keep the two sides separate.{{sfn|"Policeman injured in Front clashes". ''The Guardian''}}{{sfn|"25 police hurt in NF march". ''The Guardian''}}

A petition of 10,000 residents was raised to cancel the meeting, but to no effect.{{sfn|May|2012}} [[Ealing London Borough Council|Ealing Council]] had blocked previous meetings by the National Front, but, under the [[Representation of the People Act 1969]], they allowed the party to use the hall.{{sfn|Chippindale|Ballantyne|1979|p=1}} The day before the meeting a march by the IWA was planned from central Southall, past the town hall, and ending at [[Ealing Town Hall]]. Approximately 1,200 police officers were on duty along the five-mile (eight-kilometre) route; 19 people were arrested.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=1}} Two counter-demonstrations for the day of the meeting were planned: a picket on the pavement opposite the hall, and a seated demonstration outside it.{{sfn|Payne-James|Busuttil|Smock|2003|p=123}} To deal with the potential violence, 2,876 police officers were drafted in, 94 of whom were [[Mounted police|on horseback]]; they arrived at 11:30{{nbsp}}am and demonstrators began gathering at 1:00{{nbsp}}pm in preparation for the 7:30{{nbsp}}pm National Front meeting.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|pp=1, 4}}

[[File:Southall riots, 23 April 1979.png|thumb|upright=2|alt=Map of Southall. Peach's direction of travel away from the town hall and down a side street is shown, to the point where he was killed|Southall, showing the position of the town hall and where Peach was killed; the green arrows show Peach's direction of travel while trying to leave the area]]
The number of demonstrators at the town hall rose, and included some whom the police considered militant elements. There were some clashes between police and protesters and a small number of arrests ensued. The police decided to establish a sterile cordon around the town hall, although they still allowed a small, contained demonstration in the High Street. Cordons were set up on Lady Margaret Road, the Broadway, High Street and South Road. Between 2:30 and 3:15{{nbsp}}pm, at the High Street cordon, missiles were thrown at the police, who used [[riot shield]]s to contain the crowd.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=1}}

According to the official police report, between 5:30 and 6:30{{nbsp}}pm the level of violence rose as the crowd at the High Street cordon again began to throw missiles and at about 6:20{{nbsp}}pm between 500 and 2,000 protesters tried to breach the police lines. In response, mounted officers were brought in to disperse the crowd.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=2}}{{sfn|Oates|2019}} The author [[Yasmin Alibhai-Brown]], who was present at the demonstration, thought the mood changed when the police tactics changed from containment to dispersement, which triggered the missile-throwing reaction from the crowd.{{sfn|"Southall Rising". ''BBC''}}

A house on Park View Road, the headquarters of Peoples Unite, was used as a first aid post.{{sfn|Hann|2012|p=297}} The official police report states that the residents were "a group of mainly Rastafarians" who were [[squatting]] at the premises, and that these occupants threw missiles from the house at police in the street.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=2}}{{efn|The police report describes the missiles thrown as a smoke canister and stones, while one of the founders of the [[pressure group]] [[INQUEST]] states that they were two flares.{{sfn|Ward|1986|p=36}}}} SPG officers entered the house and an altercation broke out in which two officers were stabbed. Those in the house—including those manning the first aid post and those receiving treatment—were beaten with truncheons, and an estimated £10,000 of damage was done to the contents of the house, including the equipment for the band [[Misty in Roots]]; the group's manager, Clarence Baker, went into a coma for five months after his skull was fractured by a police truncheon.{{sfn|Hann|2012|p=297}}{{efn|£10,000 in 1979 equates to approximately £{{Inflation|UK|10000|1979|fmt=c|r=-3}} in {{Inflation/year|UK}}, according to calculations based on the [[Consumer Price Index (United Kingdom)|Consumer Price Index]] measure of inflation.{{sfn|Clark|2023}}}}{{sfn|Brah|2005|p=45}}{{sfn|"Southall, April 1979". ''Birkbeck''}} All those inside were removed from the property, regardless of what they were doing, and there were subsequent complaints by the inhabitants of racist and sexist abuse by the police. Seventy people were arrested either at or near the address.{{sfn|Oates|2019}}{{sfn|Brah|2005|p=45}} At the trial of one of those arrested, one of the SPG officers involved reported "there was no overall direction of the police forces at this time" and the situation was "a free for all".{{sfn|Ward|1986|p=39}}

National Front members began arriving from 7:00{{nbsp}}pm.{{sfn|Oates|2019}} At its scheduled time their meeting took place. During the assembly, one of the organisation's speakers called for "the bulldozing of Southall and its replacement by a 'peaceful English hamlet{{'"}}.{{sfn|Conklin Frederking|2007|p=115}} Four members of the public were allowed into the hall to fulfil the requirements of the Representation of the People Act, but a journalist from ''[[The Daily Mirror]]'' was stopped from entering because the newspaper was considered to be "nigger loving".{{sfn|Conklin Frederking|2007|p=115}}{{sfn|Samantrai|2002|p=194}} When the meeting ended at about 10:00{{nbsp}}pm, some of the attendees gave [[Nazi salute]]s on the steps of the town hall before being escorted to safety by the police.{{sfn|Samantrai|2002|p=194}}{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=3}}

[[File:Southall riot - April 1979.png|thumb|alt=A confused scene as police pull away a protester, with other demonstrators close by|Police making arrests as the rioting was in progress]]
Once the meeting was underway, the police decided to clear the area of demonstrators and allowed them to pass along the Broadway towards the crossroads with Northcote Avenue and Beachcroft Avenue.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=5}} At about 7:30{{nbsp}}pm Peach, with four friends, decided to return to their cars and moved towards the junction.{{sfn|Renton|2014}} The group had been on the Broadway since they arrived in the area at 4:45{{nbsp}}pm.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=10}} At around the same time a flare or [[petrol bomb]] was thrown either at or over a police coach on the Broadway. The driver—with a policeman standing next to him—drove the coach through the crowd; no-one was injured, but eyewitnesses said that the mood of the crowd changed at that point. Two [[police van|SPG vans]] drove westwards along the Broadway and collected two crates of bricks and bottles that the crowd left behind as they retreated. Items were thrown at the two vehicles and a police inspector on a building roof radioed to the central control unit that there was a riot in progress.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=10–11}}

Peach and his friends turned off the Broadway down Beachcroft Avenue, thinking they were heading out of the area, but not realising the road only connected to Orchard Avenue, which led back to The Broadway and the heavy police cordon there.{{sfn|Renton|2014}} There was a group of 100 to 150 protesters on the corner of the Broadway and Beachcroft Avenue and the SPG vans of Unit 3 drove to the junction of the Broadway with Northcote Avenue and Beachcroft Avenue to face them. As the officers deployed out of the vehicles they were hit by missiles from the crowd. One officer was hit in the face by a brick which fractured his jaw in three places. The inspector leading the unit radioed "Immediate assistance required".{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|pp=6–7}}{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=11–12}}

The official investigation into Peach's death states that the events leading up to this point, while difficult, were relatively straightforward, but that "further description of what happened" is hampered by "conflicting accounts [that] have been given by private persons and also by police".{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=7}} The radio call from Unit 3 was picked up by SPG Unit 1, two of whose vans drove into Beachcroft Avenue from the Broadway entrance and stopped at the corner with Orchard Avenue. They deployed while under bombardment from bricks and stones.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=12–13}} The first person to exit the van was Inspector Alan Murray, who had charge of the first van of Unit 1 (called Unit 1-1), and was followed by constables Bint, White, Freestone, Richardson and Scottow. Murray and his men were using riot shields, had their truncheons drawn and worked to disperse the crowd.{{sfn|Oates|2019}}{{sfn|Renton|2014}}{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=13, 24}} During this action Peach received a blow on the head. Fourteen witnesses stated that they saw it happen and said that it was a police officer who struck the blow.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=10}} One resident told the inquest that she:

<blockquote>saw blue vans coming down Beachcroft Avenue. They were coming very fast—as they came round Beachcroft Avenue, they stopped. I saw policemen with shields come out—people started running and the police tried to disperse them. I saw police hitting. I saw a white man standing there&nbsp;... The police were hitting everybody. People started running, some in the alley, some in my house&nbsp;... I saw Peach, I then saw the policeman with the shield attack Peach.{{sfn|Renton|2014}}</blockquote>

Peach was taken into a nearby house—71 Orchard Avenue—after one of the residents saw him being hit. He was given a glass of water, but could not hold it. His eyes were rolled up to the top of his head and he had difficulty speaking. The residents soon called an ambulance, which was logged at 8:12{{nbsp}}pm; it arrived within ten minutes, and Peach was taken to [[Ealing Hospital]]. He was promptly operated on because of a large [[extradural haematoma]] but his condition worsened through the procedure. He died at 12:10{{nbsp}}am on 24 April.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=15, 20}}{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=1}}

There were 3,000 protesters in Southall on 23 April. The police arrested 345 people. 97 police were injured, as were 39 of the prisoners. 25 members of the public were also injured, of whom Peach was one.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=4}} A member of the National Front was found near Southall train station, badly beaten. He spent two days in intensive care before being released.{{sfn|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979|p=3}}{{sfn|Parry|Chippindale|1979|p=2}}

==Aftermath==
Within a day of Peach's death, Commander John Cass of the Metropolitan Police's [[Complaints Investigation Bureau]] began an investigation of the events{{sfn|"1979: Teacher dies in Southall race riots". ''BBC''}} and statements were taken from members of the SPG that day.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=81}}{{sfn|Cass Report, 14 September 1979|p=31}} [[David McNee|Sir David McNee]], then the [[Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis|Commissioner]] of the Metropolitan Police, also undertook his own eight-day review of the demonstrations, although he did not include Peach's death as part of his analysis.{{sfn|McNee|1983|p=85}}

The [[Inquests in England and Wales|inquest]] opened on 26 April 1979; John Burton, the [[Coroner#England and Wales|coroner]] for West London, oversaw the proceedings. On the opening day he allowed Peach's family to have a second [[post-mortem examination]] undertaken by an independent [[pathologist]]; the inquest was then adjourned for a month.{{sfn|Parry|1979|p=4}} It reconvened on 25 May 1979 and was again adjourned after Cass appeared as a witness and said that his investigation would take between two and three months more. By that time, he and his team had interviewed 400 people. Burton said that the inquiry would reconvene after [[Sir Tony Hetherington]], the [[Director of Public Prosecutions]] (DPP), had been given the report.{{sfn|Pallister|1979a|p=2}}{{sfn|Lewis|2010c}}

[[File:The funeral of Blair Peach.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|alt=Peach's coffin being carried by Sikhs, as part of a multiracial procession|Part of the cortège of Peach's funeral, 13 June 1979]]
Despite statements by the police and the [[Labour government, 1974–1979#Callaghan ministry|incumbent government]] that the trouble at Southall was caused by outsiders to the area, only 2 of the 342 charged were non-residents of Southall.{{sfn|Deeley|1979|p=1}} Instead of holding the trials locally, they were held {{convert|25|mi|km}} away in [[London Borough of Barnet|Barnet]].{{efn|The charges under which most people were tried were of the level seen by [[Magistrates' court (England and Wales)|magistrates' courts]]. The closest of these were those in Ealing—the same borough as the offences. Only six people were tried in [[Crown Court]]s, which are reserved for more serious offences.{{sfn|de Kauwe|1980|p=15}}}} Lalith de Kauwe, writing for ''Bulletin''—the publication of the [[Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers]]—writes that while initially 90 per cent of the defendants were found guilty, this dropped to 70 per cent once the press began to publicise the matter.{{sfn|de Kauwe|1980|p=15}}

On 12 June 1979 Peach's body was laid out at the Dominion Cinema in Southall; 8,000 people filed past it.{{sfn|Anand|2019}} The following day he was buried at [[East London Cemetery]], where between 5,000 and 10,000 people were in attendance.{{sfn|Pallister|1979b|p=14}}{{efn|Figures for the number vary. ''[[The Guardian]]'' newspaper carried a report of a [[cortège]] of 5,000;{{sfn|Pallister|1979b|p=14}} the ''[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]'' and David Ransom, in his history of the subject, state 10,000 people attended.{{sfn|May|2012}}{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=58}}}} Three days after the funeral, McNee defended the actions of the SPG and told a black reporter "I understand the concern of your people. But if you keep off the streets of London and behave yourselves you won't have the SPG to worry about."{{sfn|Lewis|2009a}}

===Cass investigation===
One member of SPG Unit 1-1 was questioned by Cass's team in early June 1979 after the forensic report stated that Peach was probably not killed by a police truncheon, but by a lead-filled cosh or pipe. A search of the unit's lockers found 26 weapons—including police truncheons—many of which were unauthorised, including coshes and knives, as well as sets of keys and a stolen driving licence.{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=32}}{{sfn|Lewis|2010b}}{{sfn|"PC hid his cosh 'in panic' before search". ''The Guardian''}}{{efn|A sample list of the weapons found in the lockers of Unit 1-1's members included a crowbar, metal cosh, whip handle, stock ship, brass handle, knives, American-style truncheons, a rhino whip and a pickaxe handle.{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=32}}}} Cass's team raided the home of PC Grenville Bint, where weapons and Nazi memorabilia were found. Bint stated he collected the memorabilia as a hobby.{{sfn|"PC hid his cosh 'in panic' before search". ''The Guardian''}}

During his investigation Cass held several identification parades, including for Officer F, Officer G and Officer I.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=11}}{{efn|When Cass's report was released to the public, all names—including that of Cass himself—were redacted. The only name that appeared in the report was that of Peach.{{sfn|Renton|2014}}}} These were identified by the barrister and historian [[David Renton]] from the inquest as PCs Raymond White, James Scottow and Anthony Richardson, respectively.{{sfn|Renton|2014}} No witness managed to identify the man they saw hitting Peach.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=11}}{{sfn|Cass Report, 14 September 1979|pp=2–3}} It later transpired that one officer present at the riots shaved off the moustache which he had that day, while Inspector Murray grew a beard and refused to take part in the identity parades. Many of the uniforms that the police wore that day had been dry-cleaned before they were inspected.{{sfn|Stubbs|2009}}{{sfn|Evans|2010}} Cass ran up against misleading stories from the members of Unit 1-1 and in his report he stated "The attitude and untruthfulness of some of the officers involved is a contributory factor."{{sfn|Cass Report, 14 September 1979|p=25}} He continued "The action of these officers clearly obstructed the police officers carrying out their duty of investigating this serious matter."{{sfn|Cass Report, 14 September 1979|pp=25–26}} Cass decided that he had identified the individual whom he considered most likely to have hit Peach, but that there was "no evidence of a conclusive nature":{{sfn|Cass Report, 14 September 1979|p=24}}

<blockquote>The officers in that carrier after disembarking, who could have assaulted Clement Blair PEACH were Officer E, Officer H, Officer G, Officer I, Officer J and Officer F, and I give them in that order of possibility.{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=12}}</blockquote>

Renton identified these officers as Murray, Bint, Scottow, Richardson, Freestone and White, respectively.{{sfn|Renton|2014}} Cass's report was accepted by the police as being accurate, and in his 1983 autobiography McNee wrote "when all the evidence was assembled it showed that Blair Peach had died from a blow to his skull. The evidence pointed to the fact that the blow had been struck by a police officer."{{sfn|McNee|1983|p=84}}

===Coroner's inquest===
Cass finished the investigation in February 1980; 30 investigators had worked for 31,000 man-hours during his enquiries.{{sfn|Cass Report, 23 August 1999|p=1}} He finished his initial report on 12 July 1979,{{sfn|Cass Report, 12 July 1979|p=1}} which was sent to the DPP, who, while praising the work he had done, stated that "there was insufficient evidence to justify a prosecution".{{sfn|Pallister|1979c|p=28}} The inquest reopened a week later. Both Burton and the lawyers representing the Metropolitan Police were given copies of Cass's report, but refused to provide copies to the lawyers representing the Peach family or those representing the Anti-Nazi League. Burton used Cass's report to determine which witnesses to call and which to ignore. [[Michael Dummett]], [[Wykeham Professor of Logic]] at Oxford University, examining the case for the [[National Council for Civil Liberties]], observes that as only the coroner and police lawyers had copies of the report, "it was impossible for anyone&nbsp;... [else] to obtain a complete picture of the evidence".{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=38}} The question of whether the family were allowed to view the reports was taken to a Divisional Court, who ruled that as the report was the property of the police, they had the right to withhold it.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=38}}

Legal counsel for the Peach family requested that the inquest be held in front of a jury, which Burton rejected; the inquest was again adjourned.{{sfn|Pallister|1979d|p=2}} The [[High Court of Justice|High Court]] rejected a challenge to overturn Burton's decision,{{sfn|Leigh|1979|p=28}} which then went to the [[Court of Appeal (England and Wales)|Court of Appeal]] where [[Lord Denning]] stated that the inquest should reconvene in front of a jury.{{sfn|Singer|1979|p=24}}{{sfn|Symon|1979|p=1}}

In early 1980 sections of the Cass report were published in ''[[The Leveller]]'' (January 1980) and ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' (March 1980). Details included in both publications were the names of Murray, White, Freestone, Richardson and Scottow.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=33}} The latter publication indicated that the decision by the DPP not to prosecute the policemen "left the investigating officers in the invidious position of appearing party to a cover-up, should their report ever become public".{{sfn|"The Blair Peach killing". ''The Sunday Times''}} In April 1980—the one-year anniversary of Peach's death—members of the group "Friends of Blair Peach Committee" picketed outside police stations holding posters that named the six members of SPG Unit 1-1 and the words "Wanted for the murder of Blair Peach".{{sfn|Timmins|1980a|p=1}}

The inquest reconvened on 28 April 1980 and was expected to last several weeks.{{sfn|"Blair Peach inquest may set a record". ''The Times''}} Both pathologists—[[David Bowen (pathologist)|David Bowen]] for the coroner and [[Keith Mant]] acting for the family—came to the same conclusions: that death was from a single blow, not a police truncheon, but a "rubber 'cosh' or hosepipe filled with lead shot, or some like weapon".{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=38}} Both stated that Peach had a thin skull, but not, as Mant observed, "pathologically thin".{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=38}} He described the action that caused the injury as "a very severe, single blow".{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=38}}

The inquest closed on 27 May 1980 during which time 83 witnesses were called.{{sfn|Cass Report, 23 August 1999|p=2}} A verdict of [[death by misadventure]] was given.{{sfn|Timmins|1980b|p=1}} The [[criminologists]] [[Phil Scraton]] and Paul Gordon consider that, given the conclusions of the Cass report, [[unlawful killing]] would have been a more appropriate verdict.{{sfn|Scraton|Gordon|1984|p=62}} In its [[editorial|leader]] the following day, ''[[The Times]]'' said that "the Peach inquest failed to provide a clear and believable explanation of the events in question"; it also stated that Peach's death should continue to be investigated.{{sfn|"A Verdict of Misadventure with Riders". ''The Times''}}

The [[National Council for Civil Liberties]] expressed concern at the way Burton conducted the inquest. The organisation felt uneasy with a theory that he put to the jury: that Peach was killed by "some political fanatic" in order to make him a martyr against the police.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|pp=37, 41}}{{sfn|"Blair Peach: Now the SPG men will testify". ''The Guardian''}} During the course of the inquest, Burton wrote to ministers to say that the question of whether Peach was killed by a police officer was a "political 'fabrication{{'"}}.{{sfn|Lewis|2010a}} He also wrote to the home secretary, lord chancellor and attorney general, claiming that there was a conspiracy to spread false information about Peach's death; he accused several media outlets, including the [[BBC]], of producing what he described as "biased propaganda".{{sfn|Lewis|2010a}} In 2010 ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' considered that Burton had shown a "lack of sympathy&nbsp;... towards Mr Peach's death".{{sfn|Alderson|2010|p=10}}

After the inquest Burton wrote a seven-page article entitled "The Blair Peach Inquest – the Unpublished Story", which he wanted to publish in the [[Coroners' Society of England and Wales|Coroners' Society]] annual report. In the article, he said that some civilian witnesses lied and were "totally politically committed to the Socialist Workers Party",{{sfn|Lewis|2010a}} and he thought that some of the Sikh witnesses "did not have experience of the English system" to give reliable evidence.{{sfn|Renton|2014}} He was persuaded not to publish the account by civil servants, who considered that the report would "discredit the impartiality of coroners in general and Dr Burton in particular".{{sfn|Lewis|2010a}}

==Subsequent events==
There were several calls for a [[public inquiry]] to examine the circumstances surrounding Peach's death and the role of the police; 79 MPs supported such a hearing, but the government refused to hold such a review.{{sfn|"1980: Peach death was 'misadventure'". ''BBC''}}{{sfn|Ford|2010b|p=37}} The Peach family also challenged the Metropolitan Police in court for the Cass report and supporting papers to be released. In February 1986 the Court of Appeal ruled that the police should release the statements and supporting papers, but not the report itself.{{sfn|"Law Report: Statements to be disclosed in police complaint". ''The Times''}} The family also sought to claim [[damages]] from the Metropolitan Police and in June 1988, after eight years of trying, they were awarded £75,000.{{sfn|"Peach application". ''The Times''}}{{efn|£75,000 in 1986 equates to approximately £{{Inflation|UK|75000|1986|fmt=c|r=-3}} in {{Inflation/year|UK}}, according to calculations based on the [[Consumer Price Index (United Kingdom)|Consumer Price Index]] measure of inflation.{{sfn|Clark|2023}}}} The political historian Mick Ryan observes that the Peach case is an example where "compensation is&nbsp;... paid in tacit admission that a wrong had been committed".{{sfn|Ryan|1996|p=165}} In April 1999 [[Paul Boateng]], the [[Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department|Minister of State for Home Affairs]], was the final minister who turned down the request for a public inquiry, saying the event had happened too long ago to be beneficial.{{sfn|Alderson|2010|p=10}}

Following correspondence with the Peach family at the time of the twentieth anniversary of Peach's death, Commander Ian Quinn of the Metropolitan Police's complaints bureau undertook a review of investigation in 1999. The family were not told of the investigation or its outcome.{{sfn|Lewis|2009b|p=12}}

On 1 April 2009, at the [[2009 G20 London summit protests]], a member of the [[Territorial Support Group]], the SPG's successor organisation, [[Death of Ian Tomlinson|struck Ian Tomlinson]], a newspaper vendor, who collapsed and died.{{sfn|Fresco|2009|p=7}} The parallels in the deaths of the two men proved to be the catalyst in the release of the Cass report to the public.{{sfn|Lewis|2010d|p=5}} Stephenson also officially apologised to Peach's family.{{sfn|Greer|McLaughlin|2012|p=281}} That June the Metropolitan Police commissioner, [[Paul Stephenson (police officer)|Sir Paul Stephenson]] announced that Cass's report and supporting documentation would be released.{{sfn|"Blair Peach death secrecy review". ''BBC''}}

===SPG Unit 1-1===
After Stephenson's announcement that the Metropolitan police would publish the Cass report, Murray stated that he believed he was the officer referred to in the report as "Officer E", but said that "Under no circumstances was I involved in the death of Blair Peach. I was not involved in his death. I'm as certain as I can be."{{sfn|Marshall|2009}} Murray considered Cass's report to be "pure fabrication to justify his failure to identify the perpetrator of this act".{{sfn|Evans|2010}} Angered at the handling of the initial investigation, Murray left the police and joined his brother's jewellery business in Scotland before becoming a lecturer in [[corporate responsibility]] at the [[University of Sheffield]].{{sfn|Evans|2010}}{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=28}}

Two days after the Nazi memorabilia and unauthorised weapons were found in his possession, Bint was transferred out of the SPG.{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=23}} Richardson and Freestone were transferred out soon afterwards; Scottow and White voluntarily transferred.{{sfn|Dummett|1980|p=33}}{{sfn|Ransom|1980|p=29}} All the officers left the police force shortly after the investigation ended.{{sfn|Ford|2010a|p=4}}

===Undercover Policing Inquiry===
In 2021 evidence was provided to the [[Undercover Policing Inquiry]] that the Metropolitan Police monitored Stubbs with undercover officers for about twenty years. This included taking photographs at Peach's funeral and creating an attendee list report, and monitoring the 20th anniversary event planning in 1998.{{sfn|Evans|2021}}

==Impact==
[[File:Ian Tomlinson remonstrates with police.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Tomlinson sitting on the ground facing the police with his arms outstretched; two men are helping him up|[[Death of Ian Tomlinson|Ian Tomlinson]], just after being struck to the ground by police. His death was the catalyst for the release of the Cass report.]]
Following the actions of the police at Southall, the Asian community in the area felt that relations between them and the police had broken down; many saw the police as aggressors. One member of the community said "Our feeling now towards the police is one of shock. In India the police are very brutal, but none of us believed until Monday night that the police here could behave equally brutally."{{sfn|Deeley|1979|p=2}} The journalists Mark Hughes and Cahal Milmo consider that the action of the SPG "became a symbol of police corruption".{{sfn|Oates|2019}}{{sfn|Hughes|Milmo|2010|p=16}}

Writing after the release of the Cass report, the leader in ''The Times'' opined that following Peach's death, "the Metropolitan Police entered a dark place from which they have been struggling to emerge ever since".{{sfn|"Blair Peach". ''The Times''}} In 2010 [[Andy Hayman]], the former [[Assistant Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis|assistant commissioner]] for [[Specialist Operations]] at the Metropolitan Police, wrote that Peach's death brought the service and the SPG into disrepute. It led to an undermining of confidence in the police and "creat[ed] a distrust of officers that in some quarters, has proved difficult to shake off".{{sfn|Hayman|2010|p=4}} The [[criminologists]] Chris Greer and Eugene McLaughlin considered Peach's death alongside the Metropolitan Police's actions in relation to the 1993 [[murder of Stephen Lawrence]], the [[death of Jean Charles de Menezes]] in 2005, the botched [[2006 Forest Gate raid]] and the death of Ian Tomlinson; they described the "succession of institutional scandals, cover-ups and botched investigations" that had tarnished the image of the service.{{sfn|Greer|McLaughlin|2010|p=1056}} Writing in the light of Tomlinson's death, Philip Johnston, a journalist with ''The Daily Telegraph'', observed that Peach was one in a number of incidents where there had been unwarranted police aggression. Johnston wrote that while at the time of Peach's death many people would have sided with the police, that is no longer the case. "Many of those from the countryside who attended the Westminster rally against the ban on fox-hunting bear the scars of a brutal confrontation with the police, which changed their view of them for ever."{{sfn|Johnston|2009|p=27}}

==Legacy==
[[File:Blair Peach Primary School and Nursery - geograph.org.uk - 1100595.jpg|thumb|Blair Peach Primary School, Southall, in 2008]]
Public reaction to Peach's death, and other underlying racial tensions including excessive police use of the [[sus law]], ultimately led to the [[1981 Brixton riot]] and a public inquiry by [[Lord Scarman]].{{sfn|May|2012}}{{sfn|"Southall Rising". ''BBC''}}

A primary school in Southall was later named after Peach.{{sfn|"Blair Peach Primary School". Ealing Council}} The Blair Peach Award was set up by the National Union of Teachers in 2010 to commemorate the former union member and as recognition of exemplary work by current members in schools and Union branches for equality and diversity issues.{{sfn|"Blair Peach Award". ''National Union of Teachers''}} In 1989 the poet and activist [[Chris Searle]] edited ''One for Blair'', an anthology of poems for the young.{{sfn|Davis|2009|p=80}}

The injury to Clarence Baker was commemorated in [[the Ruts]]'s song "Jah War".{{sfn|Lynskey|2012|p=390}} The [[Two-tone (music genre)|Two-Tone]] album ''The 2 Tone Story'' is dedicated to Peach's memory.{{sfn|''The 2 Tone Story''. Chrysalis Records}} Several songs have been written in Peach's memory, or referring to his death, including [[the Pop Group]]'s 1980 song "Justice";{{sfn|Fisher|2016}} the 1982 song "Water of Dreams" by [[Ralph McTell]];{{sfn|McTell, Ralph. "Water of Dreams"}} and "Reggae Fi Peach" by [[Linton Kwesi Johnson]], which contains the lyrics:{{sfn|Lynskey|2012|p=390}}

<blockquote><poem>Blair Peach was not an English man,
Him come from New Zealand,
Now they kill him and him dead and gone,
But his memory lingers on.{{sfn|"Reggae Fi Peach". ''Shazam''}}</poem></blockquote>


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Kevin Gately]]
* [[Liddle Towers]]
*[[Stephen Waldorf]]
*[[Death of Ian Tomlinson|Ian Tomlinson]]
*[[Anti-Nazi League]]


==Notes and references==
==References==
===Notes===
{{reflist}}
{{notes}}


==Further reading==
===References===
{{reflist|colwidth=25em|refs=}}
*Roberts, Alison. [http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23676264-details/I+thought+%E2%80%98Oh+my+God,+it%E2%80%99s+like+Blair+Peach+over+again%E2%80%99/article.do I thought 'Oh my God, it’s like Blair Peach over again'], ''Evening Standard'', April 15, 2009.

===Sources===

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* {{cite book|last=Brah|first=Avtar|author-link=Avtar Brah|title=Cartographies of Diaspora: Contesting Identities|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rKCHAgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2005|publisher=Routledge|location=London|isbn=978-1-134-80868-7}}
* {{cite book|last=Brain|first=Timothy|author-link=Tim Brain|title=A History of Policing in England and Wales from 1974: A Turbulent Journey|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lV75WQRIfxYC&pg=PP1|year=2010|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-921866-0}}
* {{cite book|last1=Butler|first1=David|author-link1=David Butler (psephologist)|last2=King|first2=Anthony|author-link2=Anthony King (political scientist)|title=The British General Election of 1964|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VNKwCwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=1965|publisher=Macmillan|location=London|isbn=978-1-349-81741-2}}
* {{cite book|last1=Butler|first1=David|author-link1=David Butler (psephologist)|last2=King|first2=Anthony|author-link2=Anthony King (political scientist)|title=The British General Election of 1966|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TA2xCwAAQBAJ&pg=PR1|year=1966|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|location=London|isbn=978-1-349-00548-2}}
* {{cite book|last1=Butler|first1=David|author-link1=David Butler (psephologist)|last2=Pinto-Duschinsky|first2=Michael|author-link2=Michael Pinto-Duschinsky|title=The British General Election of 1970|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9JKuCwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=1971|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|location=London|isbn=978-1-349-01095-0}}
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* {{cite book|last=Cram|first=Ian|title=Contested Words: Legal Restrictions on Freedom of Speech in Liberal Democracies|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_CUpDAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2016|publisher=Routledge|location=London|isbn=978-1-317-16030-4}}
* {{cite book|last1=Dummett|first1=Michael|author-link1=Michael Dummett|title=The Death of Blair Peach: the Supplementary Report of the Unofficial Committee of Enquiry|date=1980|publisher=National Council for Civil Liberties|location=London|isbn=978-0-9011-0891-3}}
* {{cite book|last=Gilroy|first=Paul|author-link=Paul Gilroy|editor=Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies|editor-link=Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies|title=Empire Strikes Back: Race and Racism in 70's Britain|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_fZ_AAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2004|publisher=Routledge|location=London|isbn=978-1-134-89702-5|chapter=Police and Thieves|pages=141–180}}
* {{cite book|last=Hammond Perry|first=Kennetta|title=London is the Place for Me: Black Britons, Citizenship, and the Politics of Race|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yn-hCgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2015|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=978-0-19-024020-2}}
* {{cite book|last=Hann|first=Dave|title=Physical Resistance: A Hundred Years of Anti-Fascism|year=2012|publisher=John Hunt Publishing|location=Winchester|isbn=978-1-7809-9177-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Joyce|first=Peter|title=Policing: Development and Contemporary Practice|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=69HzWaUM6bkC&pg=PP1|year=2010|publisher=SAGE Publications|location=London|isbn=978-1-4462-4826-3}}
* {{cite book|last1=Joyce|first1=Peter|last2=Wain|first2=Neil|title=Palgrave Dictionary of Public Order Policing, Protest and Political Violence|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kAZHBQAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2014|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan UK|location=London|isbn=978-1-137-27008-5}}
* {{cite book|last1=Kettle|first1=Martin|last2=Hodges|first2=Lucy|author-link1=Martin Kettle|title=Uprising!: the Police, the People, and the Riots in Britain's Cities|date=1982|publisher=Pan Books|location=London|isbn=978-0-330-26845-5}}
* {{cite book|last1=Lynskey|first1=Dorian|title=33 Revolutions Per Minute|title-link=33 Revolutions per Minute (book)|date=2012|publisher=Faber|location=London|isbn=978-0-5712-4135-4}}
* {{cite book|last1=McNee|first1=David|author-link1=David McNee|title=McNee's Law|url=https://archive.org/details/mcneeslaw0000mcne|url-access=registration|year=1983|publisher=Collins|location=London|isbn=978-0-0021-7007-9}}
* {{cite book|last1=Payne-James|first1=Jason|last2=Busuttil|first2=Anthony|last3=Smock|first3=William|title=Forensic Medicine: Clinical and Pathological Aspects|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6bW4WSRgfKoC&pg=PP1|year=2003|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|isbn=978-1-84110-026-5}}
* {{cite book|last1=Ransom|first1=David|title=The Blair Peach Case: Licence to Kill|date=1980|publisher=Friends of Blair Peach Committee|location=London|isbn=978-0-906224-04-5}}
* {{cite book|last1=Rollo|first1=Joanna|editor1-last=Hain|editor1-first=Peter|editor1-link=Peter Hain|title=Policing the Police|date=1980|publisher=John Calder|location=London|isbn=978-0-7145-3795-5|pages=153–208|chapter=The Special Patrol Group}}
* {{cite book|last=Ryan|first=Mick|title=Lobbying From Below: Inquest in Defence of Civil Liberties|year=1996|publisher=Taylor & Francis Group|location=London|isbn=978-1-85728-256-6}}
* {{cite book|last=Samantrai|first=Ranu|title=AlterNatives: Black Feminism in the Postimperial Nation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m4Dz7ZJzh4MC&pg=PP1|year=2002|publisher=Stanford University Press|location=Stanford, CA|isbn=978-0-8047-4321-1}}
* {{cite book|last1=Scraton|first1=Phil|author-link1=Phil Scraton|last2=Gordon|first2=Paul|title=Causes for concern|year=1984|publisher=Penguin|location=London|isbn=978-0-1402-2464-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Waddington|first=Peter|author-link=Peter Waddington|title=Liberty and Order: Public Order Policing in a Capital City|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UoiNAgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=1994|publisher=UCL Press|location=London|isbn=978-1-85728-226-9}}
* {{cite book|last1=Ward|first1=Tony|title=Death and disorder: Three Case Studies of Public Order and Policing in London|date=1986|publisher=INQUEST|location=London|isbn=978-0-946858-02-6}}
* {{cite book|last=Waters|first=Rob|title=Thinking Black: Britain, 1964–1985|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kidtDwAAQBAJ&pg=PP1|year=2018|publisher=University of California Press|location=Oakland, CA|isbn=978-0-520-96720-5}}

====Official reports====
* {{cite report|last1=Cass|first1=John|title=Report of Commander Cass dated 12 July 1979|url=https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/foi-media/metropolitan-police/other_information/corporate/blair-peach---12-july-1979-report-pseudonyms|publisher=Metropolitan Police|access-date=25 March 2019|date=12 July 1979|ref={{sfnRef|Cass Report, 12 July 1979}}}}
* {{cite report|last1=Cass|first1=John|title=Report of Commander Cass dated 14 September 1979|url=https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/foi-media/metropolitan-police/other_information/corporate/blair-peach---14-september-1979-report-pseudonyms|publisher=Metropolitan Police|access-date=25 March 2019|date=14 September 1979|ref={{sfnRef|Cass Report, 14 September 1979}}}}
* {{cite report|last1=Cass|first1=John|title=Report of Commander Cass dated 23 August 1999|url=https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/foi-media/metropolitan-police/other_information/corporate/blair-peach---23-august-1999-report-pseudonyms|publisher=Metropolitan Police|access-date=25 March 2019|date=23 August 1999|ref={{sfnRef|Cass Report, 23 August 1999}}}}
* {{cite report|title=Overview of the Southall demonstration, Investigating officers' reports into the death of Blair Peach and the decision of the then Director of Public Prosecutions|url=https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/foi-media/metropolitan-police/other_information/corporate/blair-peach---part-1|publisher=Metropolitan Police|access-date=25 March 2019|date=24 April 1979|ref={{sfnRef|Overview of the Southall demonstration, 24 April 1979}}}}

====Journals====
* {{cite journal|last1=Davis|first1=Bob|title=Going in by the front door: Searle, Earl Marshal School and Sheffield|journal=Race & Class|date=24 September 2009|volume=51|issue=2|pages=79–91|doi=10.1177/0306396809345578|s2cid=144977992}}
* {{cite journal|last1=de Kauwe|first1=Lalith|title=Southall—23rd April 1979|journal=Bulletin|date=Spring 1980|issue=12|pages=13–16|jstor=44749659}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Fox|first1=Lynne|title='Southall People' – Making an Exhibition of Themselves|journal=Immigrants & Minorities|year=1995|volume=14|issue=3|pages=304–307|doi=10.1080/02619288.1995.9974869}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Greer|first1=Chris|last2=McLaughlin|first2=Eugene|title=We Predict A Riot?: Public Order Policing, New Media Environments and the Rise of the Citizen Journalist|journal=The British Journal of Criminology|date=November 2010|volume=50|issue=6|pages=1041–1059|jstor=43610824|doi=10.1093/bjc/azq039|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Greer|first1=Chris|last2=McLaughlin|first2=Eugene|title='This Is Not Justice': Ian Tomlinson, Institutional Failure and the Press Politics of Outrage|journal=The British Journal of Criminology|date=March 2012|volume=52|issue=2|pages=274–293|jstor=44173489|doi=10.1093/bjc/azr086|url=http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/1987/1/2012%20-%20BJC%20-%20This%20is%20not%20Justice.pdf}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Karapin|first1=Roger|title=The Politics of Immigration Control in Britain and Germany: Subnational Politicians and Social Movements|journal=Comparative Politics|date=July 1999|volume=31|issue=4|pages=423–444|jstor=422238|doi=10.2307/422238|pmid=20120546|url=https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_pubs/661}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Manson|first1=Hugo|title=The Killing of Blair Peach|journal=New Zealand Listener|date=19 April 1980|pages=14–15}}
* {{cite ODNB|last=May|first=Alex|title=Peach, (Clement) Blair (1946–1979)|url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-47730|access-date=25 March 2018|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/47730|year=2012}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Renton|first1=David|title=The Killing of Blair Peach|journal=London Review of Books|date=22 May 2014|volume=36|issue=10|pages=23–26|url=https://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n10/david-renton/the-killing-of-blair-peach|issn=0260-9592}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Richman|first1=Paula|title=A Diaspora Ramayana in Southall, Greater London|journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion|date=March 1999|volume=67|issue=1|pages=33–57|jstor=1466032|doi=10.1093/jaarel/67.1.33}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Wright|first1=Niel|author-link1=Niel Wright|title=Dennis List: An Appreciation|journal=Ka Mate Ka Ora: A New Zealand Journal of Poetry and Poetics|date=March 2008|issue=5|pages=184–187|url=http://www.nzepc.auckland.ac.nz/kmko/05/ka_mate05_wright.pdf}}

====News articles====
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=25 police hurt in NF march|work=The Guardian|date=22 April 1979|page=1|ref={{sfnRef|"25 police hurt in NF march". ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=1979: Teacher dies in Southall race riots|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/23/newsid_2523000/2523959.stm|publisher=BBC
|year=2008|ref={{sfnRef|"1979: Teacher dies in Southall race riots". ''BBC''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=1980: Peach death was 'misadventure'|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/27/newsid_3023000/3023595.stm|publisher=BBC
|year=2008|ref={{sfnRef|"1980: Peach death was 'misadventure'". ''BBC''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Alderson|first1=Andrew|title=Uncomfortable reading' for the Met as Blair Peach documents go public|work=The Sunday Telegraph|date=25 April 2010|page=10}}
* {{cite news|last1=Anand|first1=Jasbir|title=Southall riots: A personal reflection|url=http://ealingnewsextra.co.uk/history/southall-riots-reflection/|work=Ealing News Extra|date=29 January 2019|access-date=11 April 2019|archive-date=10 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190410111557/http://ealingnewsextra.co.uk/history/southall-riots-reflection/|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|last1=Barling|first1=Kurt|title=Southall Rising|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2009/04/28/southall_rising_feature.shtml|publisher=BBC|access-date=10 April 2019|date=28 April 2009|ref={{sfnRef|"Southall Rising". ''BBC''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Blair Peach|work=The Times|department=Leader|date=28 April 2010|page=2|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach". ''The Times''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Blair Peach death secrecy review|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8118748.stm|publisher=BBC|date=25 June 2009|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach death secrecy review". ''BBC''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Blair Peach inquest may set a record|work=The Times|date=28 April 1980|page=2|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach inquest may set a record". ''The Times''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=The Blair Peach killing: Top yard men urged charges|work=The Sunday Times|date=16 March 1980|page=1|ref={{sfnRef|"The Blair Peach killing". ''The Sunday Times''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Blair Peach: Now the SPG men will testify|work=The Guardian|date=11 May 1980|page=4|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach: Now the SPG men will testify". ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Chaudhary|first1=Vivek|title=How London's Southall became 'Little Punjab'|url=https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/apr/04/how-london-southall-became-little-punjab-|work=The Guardian|date=4 April 2018}}
* {{cite news|last1=Chippindale|first1=Peter|last2=Ballantyne|first2=Aileen|title=Teacher dies in Front clashes|work=The Guardian|date=24 April 1979|page=1}}
* {{cite news|last=Deeley|first=Peter|title=Southhall claims refuted|work=The Observer|date=29 April 1979|pages=1–2}}
* {{cite news|last=Evans|first=Martin|title=Blair Peach Inspector denies responsibility|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=28 April 2010|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/7640037/Blair-Peach-Inspector-denies-responsibility.html}}
* {{cite news|last1=Evans|first1=Rob|title=Met spied on partner of Blair Peach for more than two decades, inquiry hears|newspaper=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/may/06/met-spied-on-blair-peach-partner-for-more-than-two-decades-inquiry-hears|date=6 May 2021}}
* {{cite news|last=Ford|first=Richard|title=Riot police did kill Blair Peach|work=The Times|date=28 April 2010a|page=4}}
* {{cite news|last=Ford|first=Richard|title=Dignity of woman who waited for the truth about Blair Peach|work=The Times|date=1 May 2010b|page=37}}
* {{cite news|last1=Fresco|first1=Adam|title=Officer suspended over G20 death as second post-mortem is held|work=The Times|date=10 April 2009|page=7}}
* {{cite news|last=Hayman|first=Andy|author-link=Andy Hayman|title=Riot police did kill Blair Peach|work=The Times|date=28 April 2010|page=4}}
* {{cite news|last1=Hughes|first1=Mark|last2=Milmo|first2=Cahal|title=How a riot in Southall became a symbol of police corruption|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/how-a-riot-in-southall-became-a-symbol-of-police-corruption-1956165.html|work=The Independent|date=28 April 2010|page=16}}
* {{cite news|last1=Johnston|first1=Philip|title=We want a police force, not brute force; Ian Tomlinson's death was a tragedy. What is worse is that, once again, the police misled us about what happened|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=9 April 2009|page=27}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Law Report: Statements to be disclosed in police complaint|work=The Times|date=5 February 1986|page=25|ref={{sfnRef|"Law Report: Statements to be disclosed in police complaint". ''The Times''}}}}
* {{cite news|last=Leigh|first=David|title=Blair Peach family loses jury inquest plea|work=The Guardian|date=16 November 1979|page=28}}
* {{cite news|last=Lewis|first=Paul|author-link=Paul Lewis (journalist)|url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/jun/12/blair-peach-police-investigation-death|title=Partner of man killed by Met officers calls for investigation to be made public|work=The Guardian|date=13 June 2009a}}
* {{cite news|last1=Lewis|first1=Paul|title=Secret Met inquiry into death of Blair Peach revealed: Family of teacher killed at protest unaware of review: Scotland Yard commander reopened file 10 years ago|work=The Guardian|date=3 October 2009b|page=12}}
* {{cite news|last=Lewis|first=Paul|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/apr/27/blair-peach-killed-police-met-report|title=Secret document which implicated Blair Peach coroner withheld by Home Office|work=The Guardian|date=22 January 2010a}}
* {{cite news|last=Lewis|first=Paul|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/apr/27/blair-peach-killed-police-met-report|title=Blair Peach killed by police at 1979 protest, Met report finds|work=The Guardian|date=27 April 2010b}}
* {{cite news|last=Lewis|first=Paul|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/apr/27/blair-peach-killing-police|title=Blair Peach: After 31 years Met police say 'sorry' for their role in his killing|work=The Guardian|date=27 April 2010c}}
* {{cite news|last=Lewis|first=Paul|title=Blair Peach: Met inquiry: Ian Tomlinson death was catalyst in report's release|work=The Guardian|date=28 April 2010d|page=5}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=The life of Blair Peach|work=The Guardian|date=16 July 1979|page=11|ref={{sfnRef|"The life of Blair Peach", ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Marshall|first1=Peter|author-link=Peter Marshall (journalist)|title=Blair Peach 'prime suspect' speaks out|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/8299015.stm|publisher=BBC|date=13 October 2009}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=National Front fields almost 300 candidates|work=The Guardian|date=19 April 1979|page=6|ref={{sfnRef|"National Front fields almost 300 candidates". ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Oates|first1=Jonathan|title=Southall riots: 23 April 1979|url=http://ealingnewsextra.co.uk/history/southall-riots-1979/|work=Ealing News Extra|date=29 January 2019|access-date=10 April 2019|archive-date=17 November 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201117203934/https://ealingnewsextra.co.uk/history/southall-riots-1979/|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite news|last=Pallister|first=David|title=Peach death file for DPP|work=The Guardian|page=2|date=25 May 1979a}}
* {{cite news|last=Pallister|first=David|title=Testimony to a fallen comrade and friend|work=The Guardian|date=14 June 1979b|page=14}}
* {{cite news|last=Pallister|first=David|title=Anger at DPP's decision on Peach death|work=The Guardian|date=4 October 1979c|page=28}}
* {{cite news|last=Pallister|first=David|title=Inquest told 'Blair was beaten in police truncheon charge'|work=The Guardian|date=12 October 1979d|page=2}}
* {{cite news|last=Parry|first=Gareth|title=Police equipment not adequate, says union|work=The Guardian|page=4|date=27 April 1979}}
* {{cite news|last1=Parry|first1=Gareth|last2=Chippindale|first2=Peter|title=Dead man known to Front by sight|work=The Guardian|date=25 April 1979|page=2}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=PC hid his cosh 'in panic' before search|work=The Guardian|date=15 May 1980|page=4|ref={{sfnRef|"PC hid his cosh 'in panic' before search". ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Peach|first1=Giles|title=We don't want an apology for my uncle. Just the truth|work=The Times|date=29 April 2010|page=24}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Peach application|work=The Times|date=10 June 1988|page=2|ref={{sfnRef|"Peach application". ''The Times''}}}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Policeman injured in Front clashes|work=The Guardian|date=21 April 1979|page=24|ref={{sfnRef|"Policeman injured in Front clashes". ''The Guardian''}}}}
* {{cite news|last1=Puri|first1=Kavita|title=The pool of blood that changed my life|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-33725217|publisher=BBC|date=5 August 2015}}
* {{cite news|last=Singer|first=Angela|title=Denning rules Peach inquest must have jury|work=The Guardian|date=15 December 1979|page=24}}
* {{cite news|last=Stubbs|first=Celia|title=Lessons from the death of Blair Peach|work=The Guardian|date=14 June 2009|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/jun/14/blair-peach-killing-cover-up}}
* {{cite news|last=Symon|first=Penny|title=Blair Peach inquest to be held before a jury after ruling by Court of Appeal|work=The Times|date=15 December 1979|page=1}}
* {{cite news|last1=Timmins|first1=Nicholas|title=Peach group name police on 'wanted' poster|work=The Times|date=22 April 1980a|page=1}}
* {{cite news|last1=Timmins|first1=Nicholas|title=Tighter police control urged in Peach misadventure verdict|work=The Times|date=28 May 1980b|pages=1–2}}
* {{cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=A Verdict of Misadventure with Riders|work=The Times|department=Leader|date=28 May 1980|page=15|ref={{sfnRef|"A Verdict of Misadventure with Riders". ''The Times''}}}}

====Internet and audio visual media====
* {{Cite AV media notes|title=The 2 Tone Story|year=1989|type=Liner notes|publisher=Chrysalis Records|id=353 657|ref={{sfnRef|''The 2 Tone Story''. Chrysalis Records}}}}
* {{cite web|title=Blair Peach Award|url=https://www.teachers.org.uk/members-reps/local-and-national-awards/blair-peach-award|publisher=National Union of Teachers|access-date=11 April 2019|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach Award". ''National Union of Teachers''}}|archive-date=11 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190411160701/https://www.teachers.org.uk/members-reps/local-and-national-awards/blair-peach-award|url-status=dead}}
* {{cite web|title=Blair Peach Gravestone|date=9 January 2017 |url=https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/news-photo/blair-peach-who-died-in-the-southall-west-london-news-photo/637744130|publisher=Getty Images|access-date=8 May 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190508124015/https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/news-photo/blair-peach-who-died-in-the-southall-west-london-news-photo/637744130|archive-date=8 May 2019|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach Gravestone" ''Getty Images''}}|url-status=live}}
* {{cite web|title=Blair Peach Primary School|url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/directory_record/86/blair_peach_primary_school|publisher=Ealing Council|access-date=11 April 2019|ref={{sfnRef|"Blair Peach Primary School". Ealing Council}}}}
* {{cite web|last1=Clark|first1=Gregory|title=The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)|url=https://www.measuringworth.com/ukearncpi/|access-date=22 February 2023|publisher=MeasuringWorth|date=2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230401021917/https://www.measuringworth.com/datasets/ukearncpi/|archive-date=1 April 2023}}
* {{cite web|last1=Fisher|first1=Devon|title=The Pop Group: For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?|url=https://www.popmatters.com/the-pop-group-for-how-much-longer-do-we-tolerate-mass-murder-2495444534.html|publisher=Pop Matters|access-date=12 April 2019|date=15 March 2016}}
* {{cite web|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=History of the Metropolitan Police: Special Patrol Group|url=https://www.met.police.uk/history/special_patrol.htm|publisher=Metropolitan Police Service|access-date=4 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120815211045/https://www.met.police.uk/history/special_patrol.htm|archive-date=15 August 2012|ref={{sfnRef|"History of the Metropolitan Police: Special Patrol Group". ''Metropolitan Police Service''}}}}
* {{cite web|last1=McTell|first1=Ralph|author-link1=Ralph McTell|title=Water of Dreams|url=http://www.ralphmctell.co.uk/features/water-of-dreams/|access-date=11 April 2019|ref={{sfnRef|McTell, Ralph. "Water of Dreams"}}}}
* {{cite web|title=Reggae Fi Peach|url=https://www.shazam.com/gb/track/47093675/reggae-fi-peach|publisher=Shazam|access-date=12 April 2019|ref={{sfnRef|"Reggae Fi Peach". ''Shazam''}}}}
* {{cite web|last1=Searle|first1=Chris|author-link1=Chris Searle|title=Remembering Blair Peach: 30 Years On|url=http://www.irr.org.uk/news/remembering-blair-peach-30-years-on/|publisher=Institute of Race Relations|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181116083451/http://www.irr.org.uk/news/remembering-blair-peach-30-years-on/|archive-date=16 November 2018|access-date=29 March 2019|date=23 April 1979}}
* {{cite web|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Southall, April 1979: How to fight the fascists and win (then and now)|url=http://www.bbk.ac.uk/events/remote_event_view?id=4788|publisher=Birkbeck, University of London|access-date=10 April 2019|ref={{sfnRef|"Southall, April 1979". ''Birkbeck''}}}}
* {{cite web|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|title=Territorial Support Group|url=https://www.met.police.uk/co/territorial_support.htm|publisher=Metropolitan Police Service|access-date=4 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090412102030/https://www.met.police.uk/co/territorial_support.htm|archive-date=12 April 2009|ref={{sfnRef|"Territorial Support Group". ''Metropolitan Police Service''}}}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.met.police.uk/foi-ai/af/accessing-information/met/investigation-into-the-death-of-blair-peach/ Investigation documents] released by the [[Metropolitan Police Service]]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_6550000/newsid_6559500/6559545.stm?bw=nb&mp=wm&news=1&bbcws=1 1979: Teacher dies in Southall riots] "A 33-year-old man dies from head injuries after fighting between police and demonstrators in Southall. (First broadcast 23 April 1979)" video of events by [[BBC News]]
* [http://marxists.org/archive/foot-paul/1979/06/blair.html Blair: our brother, our friend] by [[Paul Foot (journalist)|Paul Foot]]

{{coord|51.51051|N|0.38034|W|type:event_region:GB_dim:50|display=title}}
{{Authority control}}


<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME= Peach, Blair
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=teacher, political activist
|DATE OF BIRTH=1946-03-25
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[New Zealand]]
|DATE OF DEATH=1979-04-23
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[London]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peach, Blair}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peach, Blair}}
[[Category:New Zealand left-wing activists]]
[[Category:New Zealand left-wing activists]]
[[Category:Socialist Workers Party members (UK)]]
[[Category:Socialist Workers Party (UK) members]]
[[Category:New Zealand schoolteachers]]
[[Category:New Zealand schoolteachers]]
[[Category:1946 births]]
[[Category:1946 births]]
[[Category:1979 deaths]]
[[Category:1979 deaths]]
[[Category:Protest-related deaths]]

[[Category:Deaths by beating in the United Kingdom]]
[[eu:Blair Peach]]
[[Category:New Zealand people murdered abroad]]
[[Category:Victoria University of Wellington alumni]]
[[Category:Police misconduct in England]]
[[Category:1979 in London]]
[[Category:Southall]]
[[Category:Violent deaths in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:New Zealand emigrants to the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:New Zealand trade unionists]]
[[Category:British trade unionists]]
[[Category:1970s crimes in London]]
[[Category:April 1979 events in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:History of the London Borough of Ealing]]
[[Category:Deaths by person in London]]
[[Category:Metropolitan Police operations]]
[[Category:Police brutality in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:20th-century New Zealand educators]]

Latest revision as of 18:58, 15 December 2024

Blair Peach
Peach, shown head and shoulders, with black hair and a beard; looking downwards
Born
Clement Blair Peach

(1946-03-25)25 March 1946
Died24 April 1979(1979-04-24) (aged 33)
Southall, London, England
Cause of deathHead trauma
OccupationTeacher

Clement Blair Peach (25 March 1946 – 24 April 1979) was a New Zealand teacher who was killed during an anti-racism demonstration in Southall, London, England. A campaigner and activist against the far right, in April 1979 Peach took part in an Anti-Nazi League demonstration in Southall against a National Front election meeting in the town hall and was hit on the head, probably by a member of the Special Patrol Group (SPG), a specialist unit within the Metropolitan Police Service. He died in hospital that night.

An investigation by Commander John Cass of the Metropolitan Police's Complaints Investigation Bureau concluded that Peach had been killed by one of six SPG officers, and others had preserved their silence to obstruct his investigation. The report was not released to the public, but was available to John Burton, the coroner who conducted the inquest; excerpts from a leaked copy were also published in The Leveller and The Sunday Times in early 1980. In May 1980 the jury in the inquest arrived at a verdict of death by misadventure, although press and some pressure groups—notably the National Council for Civil Liberties—expressed concern that no clear answers had been provided, and at the way Burton conducted the inquest.

Celia Stubbs, Peach's partner, campaigned for the Cass report to be released and for a full public inquiry. An inquiry was rejected, but in 1988 the Metropolitan Police paid £75,000 compensation to Peach's family. In 2009 Ian Tomlinson died after he was struck from behind by a member of the Territorial Support Group, the SPG's successor organisation; the parallels in the deaths proved to be the catalyst in the release of the Cass report to the public. The Metropolitan Police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, released the report and supporting documentation. He also offered an official apology to Peach's family.

The policing of the demonstration in Southall damaged community relations in the area. Since Peach's death the Metropolitan Police have been involved in a series of incidents and poorly conducted investigations—the 1993 murder of Stephen Lawrence, the death of Jean Charles de Menezes in 2005, the botched 2006 Forest Gate raid and the death of Tomlinson—all of which tarnished the image of the service. Peach's death has been remembered in the music of the Pop Group, Ralph McTell and Linton Kwesi Johnson; the National Union of Teachers set up the Blair Peach Award for work for equality and diversity issues and a school in Southall is named after him.

Background

[edit]

Blair Peach

[edit]

Clement Blair Peach was born in Napier, New Zealand, on 25 March 1946, to Clement and Janet Peach.[1][2] He was one of three brothers, the others being Roy and Philip; the former was a solicitor and led the family's legal campaign after Blair's death.[3] Blair was schooled at Colenso College, then studied education and psychology at the Victoria University of Wellington,[1][4] where he co-edited the Argot literary magazine with his flatmate Dennis List and David Rutherford.[5][6] During his studies Peach visited Britain and liked the country. After graduating he was employed in several temporary jobs, but was turned down for compulsory military training for having an "unsuitable character".[7] He emigrated to Britain in 1969 and was soon employed as a teacher at the Phoenix special needs school in Bow, east London.[1] In 1970 he entered a long-term relationship with Celia Stubbs; they had first met in New Zealand in 1963 when she was visiting the country. Peach helped raise Stubbs's two daughters from her previous relationship,[7] and the couple regarded each other as husband and wife.[8]

Peach was politically active and joined the Socialist Workers' Party (SWP), Socialist Teachers' Association and the local branch of the National Union of Teachers.[1] He was also a committed opponent of racism and was active in the Anti-Nazi League.[9] He had been arrested previously when campaigning on political issues,[10] and in 1974 he was charged with threatening behaviour after challenging a local publican's refusal to serve black customers; he was acquitted.[11]

Southall

[edit]
Southall is located in Greater London
Southall
Southall
Southall, London

As a result of the population transfers after the 1947 partition of India over ten million people were impoverished. From the late 1950s a significant number of them relocated. Many Sikhs and Hindus left the subcontinent to settle in Greater London, particularly Southall, where shortages of workers at factories, and the employment prospects at nearby Heathrow Airport meant jobs were easily obtainable.[12] Some of the early arrivals found work at the R. Woolf and Co Rubber factory; by 1965 all the lower level workers were from Poland or the Indian subcontinent.[13][a] Racial discrimination in the workplace was common; 85 per cent of those Asian workers who had been given entry into the UK on the basis of their education or training were employed only in unskilled or semi-skilled roles. Kennetta Hammond Perry, in her history of post-war immigration, identifies the reasons as being "in part because of perceptions about their level of competence and stereotypes about their ability to speak English".[15] Indian workers also faced discrimination from the white-dominated trade unions, and so formed their own organisation, the Indian Workers' Association (IWA).[12]

During local elections of the 1960s anti-immigration rhetoric was used by some candidates, successfully in many cases.[16] Smaller right-wing parties used immigration as a platform on which to stand, including in Southall.[17] In the local elections of May 1964, the anti-immigration British National Party (BNP) polled 15 per cent of the vote in Southall;[18] in the general election that October the BNP leader, John Bean, received 9.1 per cent in the Southall constituency.[19] Bean won 7.4 per cent of the vote at the 1966 general election.[20] The BNP's successor, the National Front, recorded 4.4 per cent of the vote at the 1970 general election.[21]

In June 1976 the racist murder of Gurdip Singh Chaggar in Southall—outside the offices of the IWA—led to the former chairman of the National Front, John Kingsley Read, stating "one down, a million to go".[22][23][b] Chaggar's murder led to the formation of the Southall Youth Movement (SYM) to challenge the rise in racism and attacks from the National Front.[14][24][25] Rioting in the area took place between police and Asian youths and members of Peoples Unite, a similar group to the SYM, but consisting of young Afro-Caribbeans.[26]

Special Patrol Group

[edit]

The Special Patrol Group (SPG) was formed in 1961 as a specialist squad within the Metropolitan Police.[c] It provided a mobile, centrally controlled reserve of uniformed officers which supported local areas, particularly when policing serious crime and civil disturbances.[28] The SPG comprised police officers capable of working as disciplined teams preventing public disorder, targeting areas of serious crime, carrying out stop and searches, or providing a response to terrorist threats.[29][30] In 1978 there were 1,347 SPG members in forces across the UK, 204 of them in the Metropolitan Police Service. They were divided into six units, each of which contained three sergeants and 30 constables. Each unit was commanded by an inspector.[31]

The use of the SPG proved controversial to some. It was involved in the Red Lion Square disorders, when Kevin Gately, a student demonstrating against a National Front march, was killed from a blow to the head from a blunt instrument; the perpetrator was never identified. Accusations were made that the police were inappropriately violent towards those demonstrating.[27][32] The former chief constable, Tim Brain, writes "their critics viewed them with suspicion as a force within a force"; the Metropolitan Police history observes that "their presence sometimes came to assume unwanted symbolic significance".[28] The former chief constable Geoffrey Dear states that the SPG "might apparently solve one problem but in its wake create another of aggravated relationships between minority groups and the police in general".[33]

The SPG was disbanded in 1986 and, replaced by District Support Units (DSU).[27][30][d] After receiving bad press, the DSU were replaced by the Territorial Support Group in January 1987.[34]

23 April 1979

[edit]
A large Georgian-era building with a white portico
The old Southall town hall, where the National Front rally took place

In the run-up to the 1979 general election, the National Front announced that it would hold a meeting at Southall Town Hall on 23 April 1979, St George's Day. Southall was to be one of 300 parliamentary seats for which the organisation put up candidates.[35] Prior to the Southall meeting, similar events had resulted in clashes with anti-racist protesters, including in Islington, north London, on 22 April, and in Leicester the following day. At both events, police had been injured trying to keep the two sides separate.[36][37]

A petition of 10,000 residents was raised to cancel the meeting, but to no effect.[1] Ealing Council had blocked previous meetings by the National Front, but, under the Representation of the People Act 1969, they allowed the party to use the hall.[38] The day before the meeting a march by the IWA was planned from central Southall, past the town hall, and ending at Ealing Town Hall. Approximately 1,200 police officers were on duty along the five-mile (eight-kilometre) route; 19 people were arrested.[39] Two counter-demonstrations for the day of the meeting were planned: a picket on the pavement opposite the hall, and a seated demonstration outside it.[40] To deal with the potential violence, 2,876 police officers were drafted in, 94 of whom were on horseback; they arrived at 11:30 am and demonstrators began gathering at 1:00 pm in preparation for the 7:30 pm National Front meeting.[41]

Map of Southall. Peach's direction of travel away from the town hall and down a side street is shown, to the point where he was killed
Southall, showing the position of the town hall and where Peach was killed; the green arrows show Peach's direction of travel while trying to leave the area

The number of demonstrators at the town hall rose, and included some whom the police considered militant elements. There were some clashes between police and protesters and a small number of arrests ensued. The police decided to establish a sterile cordon around the town hall, although they still allowed a small, contained demonstration in the High Street. Cordons were set up on Lady Margaret Road, the Broadway, High Street and South Road. Between 2:30 and 3:15 pm, at the High Street cordon, missiles were thrown at the police, who used riot shields to contain the crowd.[39]

According to the official police report, between 5:30 and 6:30 pm the level of violence rose as the crowd at the High Street cordon again began to throw missiles and at about 6:20 pm between 500 and 2,000 protesters tried to breach the police lines. In response, mounted officers were brought in to disperse the crowd.[42][43] The author Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, who was present at the demonstration, thought the mood changed when the police tactics changed from containment to dispersement, which triggered the missile-throwing reaction from the crowd.[44]

A house on Park View Road, the headquarters of Peoples Unite, was used as a first aid post.[45] The official police report states that the residents were "a group of mainly Rastafarians" who were squatting at the premises, and that these occupants threw missiles from the house at police in the street.[42][e] SPG officers entered the house and an altercation broke out in which two officers were stabbed. Those in the house—including those manning the first aid post and those receiving treatment—were beaten with truncheons, and an estimated £10,000 of damage was done to the contents of the house, including the equipment for the band Misty in Roots; the group's manager, Clarence Baker, went into a coma for five months after his skull was fractured by a police truncheon.[45][f][48][49] All those inside were removed from the property, regardless of what they were doing, and there were subsequent complaints by the inhabitants of racist and sexist abuse by the police. Seventy people were arrested either at or near the address.[43][48] At the trial of one of those arrested, one of the SPG officers involved reported "there was no overall direction of the police forces at this time" and the situation was "a free for all".[50]

National Front members began arriving from 7:00 pm.[43] At its scheduled time their meeting took place. During the assembly, one of the organisation's speakers called for "the bulldozing of Southall and its replacement by a 'peaceful English hamlet'".[51] Four members of the public were allowed into the hall to fulfil the requirements of the Representation of the People Act, but a journalist from The Daily Mirror was stopped from entering because the newspaper was considered to be "nigger loving".[51][52] When the meeting ended at about 10:00 pm, some of the attendees gave Nazi salutes on the steps of the town hall before being escorted to safety by the police.[52][53]

A confused scene as police pull away a protester, with other demonstrators close by
Police making arrests as the rioting was in progress

Once the meeting was underway, the police decided to clear the area of demonstrators and allowed them to pass along the Broadway towards the crossroads with Northcote Avenue and Beachcroft Avenue.[54] At about 7:30 pm Peach, with four friends, decided to return to their cars and moved towards the junction.[55] The group had been on the Broadway since they arrived in the area at 4:45 pm.[56] At around the same time a flare or petrol bomb was thrown either at or over a police coach on the Broadway. The driver—with a policeman standing next to him—drove the coach through the crowd; no-one was injured, but eyewitnesses said that the mood of the crowd changed at that point. Two SPG vans drove westwards along the Broadway and collected two crates of bricks and bottles that the crowd left behind as they retreated. Items were thrown at the two vehicles and a police inspector on a building roof radioed to the central control unit that there was a riot in progress.[57]

Peach and his friends turned off the Broadway down Beachcroft Avenue, thinking they were heading out of the area, but not realising the road only connected to Orchard Avenue, which led back to The Broadway and the heavy police cordon there.[55] There was a group of 100 to 150 protesters on the corner of the Broadway and Beachcroft Avenue and the SPG vans of Unit 3 drove to the junction of the Broadway with Northcote Avenue and Beachcroft Avenue to face them. As the officers deployed out of the vehicles they were hit by missiles from the crowd. One officer was hit in the face by a brick which fractured his jaw in three places. The inspector leading the unit radioed "Immediate assistance required".[58][59]

The official investigation into Peach's death states that the events leading up to this point, while difficult, were relatively straightforward, but that "further description of what happened" is hampered by "conflicting accounts [that] have been given by private persons and also by police".[60] The radio call from Unit 3 was picked up by SPG Unit 1, two of whose vans drove into Beachcroft Avenue from the Broadway entrance and stopped at the corner with Orchard Avenue. They deployed while under bombardment from bricks and stones.[61] The first person to exit the van was Inspector Alan Murray, who had charge of the first van of Unit 1 (called Unit 1-1), and was followed by constables Bint, White, Freestone, Richardson and Scottow. Murray and his men were using riot shields, had their truncheons drawn and worked to disperse the crowd.[43][55][62] During this action Peach received a blow on the head. Fourteen witnesses stated that they saw it happen and said that it was a police officer who struck the blow.[63] One resident told the inquest that she:

saw blue vans coming down Beachcroft Avenue. They were coming very fast—as they came round Beachcroft Avenue, they stopped. I saw policemen with shields come out—people started running and the police tried to disperse them. I saw police hitting. I saw a white man standing there ... The police were hitting everybody. People started running, some in the alley, some in my house ... I saw Peach, I then saw the policeman with the shield attack Peach.[55]

Peach was taken into a nearby house—71 Orchard Avenue—after one of the residents saw him being hit. He was given a glass of water, but could not hold it. His eyes were rolled up to the top of his head and he had difficulty speaking. The residents soon called an ambulance, which was logged at 8:12 pm; it arrived within ten minutes, and Peach was taken to Ealing Hospital. He was promptly operated on because of a large extradural haematoma but his condition worsened through the procedure. He died at 12:10 am on 24 April.[64][65]

There were 3,000 protesters in Southall on 23 April. The police arrested 345 people. 97 police were injured, as were 39 of the prisoners. 25 members of the public were also injured, of whom Peach was one.[66] A member of the National Front was found near Southall train station, badly beaten. He spent two days in intensive care before being released.[53][67]

Aftermath

[edit]

Within a day of Peach's death, Commander John Cass of the Metropolitan Police's Complaints Investigation Bureau began an investigation of the events[68] and statements were taken from members of the SPG that day.[69][70] Sir David McNee, then the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, also undertook his own eight-day review of the demonstrations, although he did not include Peach's death as part of his analysis.[71]

The inquest opened on 26 April 1979; John Burton, the coroner for West London, oversaw the proceedings. On the opening day he allowed Peach's family to have a second post-mortem examination undertaken by an independent pathologist; the inquest was then adjourned for a month.[72] It reconvened on 25 May 1979 and was again adjourned after Cass appeared as a witness and said that his investigation would take between two and three months more. By that time, he and his team had interviewed 400 people. Burton said that the inquiry would reconvene after Sir Tony Hetherington, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), had been given the report.[73][74]

Peach's coffin being carried by Sikhs, as part of a multiracial procession
Part of the cortège of Peach's funeral, 13 June 1979

Despite statements by the police and the incumbent government that the trouble at Southall was caused by outsiders to the area, only 2 of the 342 charged were non-residents of Southall.[75] Instead of holding the trials locally, they were held 25 miles (40 km) away in Barnet.[g] Lalith de Kauwe, writing for Bulletin—the publication of the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers—writes that while initially 90 per cent of the defendants were found guilty, this dropped to 70 per cent once the press began to publicise the matter.[76]

On 12 June 1979 Peach's body was laid out at the Dominion Cinema in Southall; 8,000 people filed past it.[77] The following day he was buried at East London Cemetery, where between 5,000 and 10,000 people were in attendance.[78][h] Three days after the funeral, McNee defended the actions of the SPG and told a black reporter "I understand the concern of your people. But if you keep off the streets of London and behave yourselves you won't have the SPG to worry about."[80]

Cass investigation

[edit]

One member of SPG Unit 1-1 was questioned by Cass's team in early June 1979 after the forensic report stated that Peach was probably not killed by a police truncheon, but by a lead-filled cosh or pipe. A search of the unit's lockers found 26 weapons—including police truncheons—many of which were unauthorised, including coshes and knives, as well as sets of keys and a stolen driving licence.[81][82][83][i] Cass's team raided the home of PC Grenville Bint, where weapons and Nazi memorabilia were found. Bint stated he collected the memorabilia as a hobby.[83]

During his investigation Cass held several identification parades, including for Officer F, Officer G and Officer I.[84][j] These were identified by the barrister and historian David Renton from the inquest as PCs Raymond White, James Scottow and Anthony Richardson, respectively.[55] No witness managed to identify the man they saw hitting Peach.[84][85] It later transpired that one officer present at the riots shaved off the moustache which he had that day, while Inspector Murray grew a beard and refused to take part in the identity parades. Many of the uniforms that the police wore that day had been dry-cleaned before they were inspected.[86][87] Cass ran up against misleading stories from the members of Unit 1-1 and in his report he stated "The attitude and untruthfulness of some of the officers involved is a contributory factor."[88] He continued "The action of these officers clearly obstructed the police officers carrying out their duty of investigating this serious matter."[89] Cass decided that he had identified the individual whom he considered most likely to have hit Peach, but that there was "no evidence of a conclusive nature":[90]

The officers in that carrier after disembarking, who could have assaulted Clement Blair PEACH were Officer E, Officer H, Officer G, Officer I, Officer J and Officer F, and I give them in that order of possibility.[91]

Renton identified these officers as Murray, Bint, Scottow, Richardson, Freestone and White, respectively.[55] Cass's report was accepted by the police as being accurate, and in his 1983 autobiography McNee wrote "when all the evidence was assembled it showed that Blair Peach had died from a blow to his skull. The evidence pointed to the fact that the blow had been struck by a police officer."[92]

Coroner's inquest

[edit]

Cass finished the investigation in February 1980; 30 investigators had worked for 31,000 man-hours during his enquiries.[93] He finished his initial report on 12 July 1979,[65] which was sent to the DPP, who, while praising the work he had done, stated that "there was insufficient evidence to justify a prosecution".[94] The inquest reopened a week later. Both Burton and the lawyers representing the Metropolitan Police were given copies of Cass's report, but refused to provide copies to the lawyers representing the Peach family or those representing the Anti-Nazi League. Burton used Cass's report to determine which witnesses to call and which to ignore. Michael Dummett, Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford University, examining the case for the National Council for Civil Liberties, observes that as only the coroner and police lawyers had copies of the report, "it was impossible for anyone ... [else] to obtain a complete picture of the evidence".[95] The question of whether the family were allowed to view the reports was taken to a Divisional Court, who ruled that as the report was the property of the police, they had the right to withhold it.[95]

Legal counsel for the Peach family requested that the inquest be held in front of a jury, which Burton rejected; the inquest was again adjourned.[96] The High Court rejected a challenge to overturn Burton's decision,[97] which then went to the Court of Appeal where Lord Denning stated that the inquest should reconvene in front of a jury.[98][99]

In early 1980 sections of the Cass report were published in The Leveller (January 1980) and The Sunday Times (March 1980). Details included in both publications were the names of Murray, White, Freestone, Richardson and Scottow.[100] The latter publication indicated that the decision by the DPP not to prosecute the policemen "left the investigating officers in the invidious position of appearing party to a cover-up, should their report ever become public".[101] In April 1980—the one-year anniversary of Peach's death—members of the group "Friends of Blair Peach Committee" picketed outside police stations holding posters that named the six members of SPG Unit 1-1 and the words "Wanted for the murder of Blair Peach".[102]

The inquest reconvened on 28 April 1980 and was expected to last several weeks.[103] Both pathologists—David Bowen for the coroner and Keith Mant acting for the family—came to the same conclusions: that death was from a single blow, not a police truncheon, but a "rubber 'cosh' or hosepipe filled with lead shot, or some like weapon".[95] Both stated that Peach had a thin skull, but not, as Mant observed, "pathologically thin".[95] He described the action that caused the injury as "a very severe, single blow".[95]

The inquest closed on 27 May 1980 during which time 83 witnesses were called.[104] A verdict of death by misadventure was given.[105] The criminologists Phil Scraton and Paul Gordon consider that, given the conclusions of the Cass report, unlawful killing would have been a more appropriate verdict.[106] In its leader the following day, The Times said that "the Peach inquest failed to provide a clear and believable explanation of the events in question"; it also stated that Peach's death should continue to be investigated.[107]

The National Council for Civil Liberties expressed concern at the way Burton conducted the inquest. The organisation felt uneasy with a theory that he put to the jury: that Peach was killed by "some political fanatic" in order to make him a martyr against the police.[108][109] During the course of the inquest, Burton wrote to ministers to say that the question of whether Peach was killed by a police officer was a "political 'fabrication'".[110] He also wrote to the home secretary, lord chancellor and attorney general, claiming that there was a conspiracy to spread false information about Peach's death; he accused several media outlets, including the BBC, of producing what he described as "biased propaganda".[110] In 2010 The Daily Telegraph considered that Burton had shown a "lack of sympathy ... towards Mr Peach's death".[111]

After the inquest Burton wrote a seven-page article entitled "The Blair Peach Inquest – the Unpublished Story", which he wanted to publish in the Coroners' Society annual report. In the article, he said that some civilian witnesses lied and were "totally politically committed to the Socialist Workers Party",[110] and he thought that some of the Sikh witnesses "did not have experience of the English system" to give reliable evidence.[55] He was persuaded not to publish the account by civil servants, who considered that the report would "discredit the impartiality of coroners in general and Dr Burton in particular".[110]

Subsequent events

[edit]

There were several calls for a public inquiry to examine the circumstances surrounding Peach's death and the role of the police; 79 MPs supported such a hearing, but the government refused to hold such a review.[112][113] The Peach family also challenged the Metropolitan Police in court for the Cass report and supporting papers to be released. In February 1986 the Court of Appeal ruled that the police should release the statements and supporting papers, but not the report itself.[114] The family also sought to claim damages from the Metropolitan Police and in June 1988, after eight years of trying, they were awarded £75,000.[115][k] The political historian Mick Ryan observes that the Peach case is an example where "compensation is ... paid in tacit admission that a wrong had been committed".[116] In April 1999 Paul Boateng, the Minister of State for Home Affairs, was the final minister who turned down the request for a public inquiry, saying the event had happened too long ago to be beneficial.[111]

Following correspondence with the Peach family at the time of the twentieth anniversary of Peach's death, Commander Ian Quinn of the Metropolitan Police's complaints bureau undertook a review of investigation in 1999. The family were not told of the investigation or its outcome.[117]

On 1 April 2009, at the 2009 G20 London summit protests, a member of the Territorial Support Group, the SPG's successor organisation, struck Ian Tomlinson, a newspaper vendor, who collapsed and died.[118] The parallels in the deaths of the two men proved to be the catalyst in the release of the Cass report to the public.[119] Stephenson also officially apologised to Peach's family.[120] That June the Metropolitan Police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson announced that Cass's report and supporting documentation would be released.[121]

SPG Unit 1-1

[edit]

After Stephenson's announcement that the Metropolitan police would publish the Cass report, Murray stated that he believed he was the officer referred to in the report as "Officer E", but said that "Under no circumstances was I involved in the death of Blair Peach. I was not involved in his death. I'm as certain as I can be."[122] Murray considered Cass's report to be "pure fabrication to justify his failure to identify the perpetrator of this act".[87] Angered at the handling of the initial investigation, Murray left the police and joined his brother's jewellery business in Scotland before becoming a lecturer in corporate responsibility at the University of Sheffield.[87][123]

Two days after the Nazi memorabilia and unauthorised weapons were found in his possession, Bint was transferred out of the SPG.[124] Richardson and Freestone were transferred out soon afterwards; Scottow and White voluntarily transferred.[100][125] All the officers left the police force shortly after the investigation ended.[126]

Undercover Policing Inquiry

[edit]

In 2021 evidence was provided to the Undercover Policing Inquiry that the Metropolitan Police monitored Stubbs with undercover officers for about twenty years. This included taking photographs at Peach's funeral and creating an attendee list report, and monitoring the 20th anniversary event planning in 1998.[127]

Impact

[edit]
Tomlinson sitting on the ground facing the police with his arms outstretched; two men are helping him up
Ian Tomlinson, just after being struck to the ground by police. His death was the catalyst for the release of the Cass report.

Following the actions of the police at Southall, the Asian community in the area felt that relations between them and the police had broken down; many saw the police as aggressors. One member of the community said "Our feeling now towards the police is one of shock. In India the police are very brutal, but none of us believed until Monday night that the police here could behave equally brutally."[128] The journalists Mark Hughes and Cahal Milmo consider that the action of the SPG "became a symbol of police corruption".[43][129]

Writing after the release of the Cass report, the leader in The Times opined that following Peach's death, "the Metropolitan Police entered a dark place from which they have been struggling to emerge ever since".[130] In 2010 Andy Hayman, the former assistant commissioner for Specialist Operations at the Metropolitan Police, wrote that Peach's death brought the service and the SPG into disrepute. It led to an undermining of confidence in the police and "creat[ed] a distrust of officers that in some quarters, has proved difficult to shake off".[131] The criminologists Chris Greer and Eugene McLaughlin considered Peach's death alongside the Metropolitan Police's actions in relation to the 1993 murder of Stephen Lawrence, the death of Jean Charles de Menezes in 2005, the botched 2006 Forest Gate raid and the death of Ian Tomlinson; they described the "succession of institutional scandals, cover-ups and botched investigations" that had tarnished the image of the service.[132] Writing in the light of Tomlinson's death, Philip Johnston, a journalist with The Daily Telegraph, observed that Peach was one in a number of incidents where there had been unwarranted police aggression. Johnston wrote that while at the time of Peach's death many people would have sided with the police, that is no longer the case. "Many of those from the countryside who attended the Westminster rally against the ban on fox-hunting bear the scars of a brutal confrontation with the police, which changed their view of them for ever."[133]

Legacy

[edit]
Blair Peach Primary School, Southall, in 2008

Public reaction to Peach's death, and other underlying racial tensions including excessive police use of the sus law, ultimately led to the 1981 Brixton riot and a public inquiry by Lord Scarman.[1][44]

A primary school in Southall was later named after Peach.[134] The Blair Peach Award was set up by the National Union of Teachers in 2010 to commemorate the former union member and as recognition of exemplary work by current members in schools and Union branches for equality and diversity issues.[135] In 1989 the poet and activist Chris Searle edited One for Blair, an anthology of poems for the young.[136]

The injury to Clarence Baker was commemorated in the Ruts's song "Jah War".[137] The Two-Tone album The 2 Tone Story is dedicated to Peach's memory.[138] Several songs have been written in Peach's memory, or referring to his death, including the Pop Group's 1980 song "Justice";[139] the 1982 song "Water of Dreams" by Ralph McTell;[140] and "Reggae Fi Peach" by Linton Kwesi Johnson, which contains the lyrics:[137]

Blair Peach was not an English man,
Him come from New Zealand,
Now they kill him and him dead and gone,
But his memory lingers on.[141]

See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The manager of the factory had served alongside Sikh troops during the Second World War and was happy to employ them.[14]
  2. ^ Reid was later charged under the Race Relations Act 1965, but was acquitted.[23]
  3. ^ The original name was the Special Patrol Group Unit; this was renamed Special Patrol Group in 1965.[27]
  4. ^ Officers in one unit beat three black youths and then conspired to pervert the course of justice.[30]
  5. ^ The police report describes the missiles thrown as a smoke canister and stones, while one of the founders of the pressure group INQUEST states that they were two flares.[46]
  6. ^ £10,000 in 1979 equates to approximately £64,000 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[47]
  7. ^ The charges under which most people were tried were of the level seen by magistrates' courts. The closest of these were those in Ealing—the same borough as the offences. Only six people were tried in Crown Courts, which are reserved for more serious offences.[76]
  8. ^ Figures for the number vary. The Guardian newspaper carried a report of a cortège of 5,000;[78] the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography and David Ransom, in his history of the subject, state 10,000 people attended.[1][79]
  9. ^ A sample list of the weapons found in the lockers of Unit 1-1's members included a crowbar, metal cosh, whip handle, stock ship, brass handle, knives, American-style truncheons, a rhino whip and a pickaxe handle.[81]
  10. ^ When Cass's report was released to the public, all names—including that of Cass himself—were redacted. The only name that appeared in the report was that of Peach.[55]
  11. ^ £75,000 in 1986 equates to approximately £278,000 in 2023, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[47]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g May 2012.
  2. ^ "Blair Peach Gravestone" Getty Images.
  3. ^ Peach 2010, p. 24.
  4. ^ Manson 1980, p. 14.
  5. ^ Wright 2008, p. 185.
  6. ^ Timmins 1980b, p. 2.
  7. ^ a b "The life of Blair Peach", The Guardian.
  8. ^ Dummett 1980, p. 9.
  9. ^ Ransom 1980, p. 5.
  10. ^ Cass Report, 12 July 1979.
  11. ^ Searle 1979.
  12. ^ a b Richman 1999, p. 35.
  13. ^ Fox 1995, pp. 304–305.
  14. ^ a b Chaudhary 2018.
  15. ^ Hammond Perry 2015, p. 232.
  16. ^ Karapin 1999, pp. 431–432.
  17. ^ Karapin 1999, p. 442.
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  32. ^ Joyce & Wain 2014, p. 282.
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  141. ^ "Reggae Fi Peach". Shazam.

Sources

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Books

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Official reports

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Journals

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News articles

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  • "25 police hurt in NF march". The Guardian. 22 April 1979. p. 1.
  • "1979: Teacher dies in Southall race riots". BBC. 2008.
  • "1980: Peach death was 'misadventure'". BBC. 2008.
  • Alderson, Andrew (25 April 2010). "Uncomfortable reading' for the Met as Blair Peach documents go public". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 10.
  • Anand, Jasbir (29 January 2019). "Southall riots: A personal reflection". Ealing News Extra. Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 11 April 2019.
  • Barling, Kurt (28 April 2009). "Southall Rising". BBC. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  • "Blair Peach". Leader. The Times. 28 April 2010. p. 2.
  • "Blair Peach death secrecy review". BBC. 25 June 2009.
  • "Blair Peach inquest may set a record". The Times. 28 April 1980. p. 2.
  • "The Blair Peach killing: Top yard men urged charges". The Sunday Times. 16 March 1980. p. 1.
  • "Blair Peach: Now the SPG men will testify". The Guardian. 11 May 1980. p. 4.
  • Chaudhary, Vivek (4 April 2018). "How London's Southall became 'Little Punjab'". The Guardian.
  • Chippindale, Peter; Ballantyne, Aileen (24 April 1979). "Teacher dies in Front clashes". The Guardian. p. 1.
  • Deeley, Peter (29 April 1979). "Southhall claims refuted". The Observer. pp. 1–2.
  • Evans, Martin (28 April 2010). "Blair Peach Inspector denies responsibility". The Daily Telegraph.
  • Evans, Rob (6 May 2021). "Met spied on partner of Blair Peach for more than two decades, inquiry hears". The Guardian.
  • Ford, Richard (28 April 2010a). "Riot police did kill Blair Peach". The Times. p. 4.
  • Ford, Richard (1 May 2010b). "Dignity of woman who waited for the truth about Blair Peach". The Times. p. 37.
  • Fresco, Adam (10 April 2009). "Officer suspended over G20 death as second post-mortem is held". The Times. p. 7.
  • Hayman, Andy (28 April 2010). "Riot police did kill Blair Peach". The Times. p. 4.
  • Hughes, Mark; Milmo, Cahal (28 April 2010). "How a riot in Southall became a symbol of police corruption". The Independent. p. 16.
  • Johnston, Philip (9 April 2009). "We want a police force, not brute force; Ian Tomlinson's death was a tragedy. What is worse is that, once again, the police misled us about what happened". The Daily Telegraph. p. 27.
  • "Law Report: Statements to be disclosed in police complaint". The Times. 5 February 1986. p. 25.
  • Leigh, David (16 November 1979). "Blair Peach family loses jury inquest plea". The Guardian. p. 28.
  • Lewis, Paul (13 June 2009a). "Partner of man killed by Met officers calls for investigation to be made public". The Guardian.
  • Lewis, Paul (3 October 2009b). "Secret Met inquiry into death of Blair Peach revealed: Family of teacher killed at protest unaware of review: Scotland Yard commander reopened file 10 years ago". The Guardian. p. 12.
  • Lewis, Paul (22 January 2010a). "Secret document which implicated Blair Peach coroner withheld by Home Office". The Guardian.
  • Lewis, Paul (27 April 2010b). "Blair Peach killed by police at 1979 protest, Met report finds". The Guardian.
  • Lewis, Paul (27 April 2010c). "Blair Peach: After 31 years Met police say 'sorry' for their role in his killing". The Guardian.
  • Lewis, Paul (28 April 2010d). "Blair Peach: Met inquiry: Ian Tomlinson death was catalyst in report's release". The Guardian. p. 5.
  • "The life of Blair Peach". The Guardian. 16 July 1979. p. 11.
  • Marshall, Peter (13 October 2009). "Blair Peach 'prime suspect' speaks out". BBC.
  • "National Front fields almost 300 candidates". The Guardian. 19 April 1979. p. 6.
  • Oates, Jonathan (29 January 2019). "Southall riots: 23 April 1979". Ealing News Extra. Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  • Pallister, David (25 May 1979a). "Peach death file for DPP". The Guardian. p. 2.
  • Pallister, David (14 June 1979b). "Testimony to a fallen comrade and friend". The Guardian. p. 14.
  • Pallister, David (4 October 1979c). "Anger at DPP's decision on Peach death". The Guardian. p. 28.
  • Pallister, David (12 October 1979d). "Inquest told 'Blair was beaten in police truncheon charge'". The Guardian. p. 2.
  • Parry, Gareth (27 April 1979). "Police equipment not adequate, says union". The Guardian. p. 4.
  • Parry, Gareth; Chippindale, Peter (25 April 1979). "Dead man known to Front by sight". The Guardian. p. 2.
  • "PC hid his cosh 'in panic' before search". The Guardian. 15 May 1980. p. 4.
  • Peach, Giles (29 April 2010). "We don't want an apology for my uncle. Just the truth". The Times. p. 24.
  • "Peach application". The Times. 10 June 1988. p. 2.
  • "Policeman injured in Front clashes". The Guardian. 21 April 1979. p. 24.
  • Puri, Kavita (5 August 2015). "The pool of blood that changed my life". BBC.
  • Singer, Angela (15 December 1979). "Denning rules Peach inquest must have jury". The Guardian. p. 24.
  • Stubbs, Celia (14 June 2009). "Lessons from the death of Blair Peach". The Guardian.
  • Symon, Penny (15 December 1979). "Blair Peach inquest to be held before a jury after ruling by Court of Appeal". The Times. p. 1.
  • Timmins, Nicholas (22 April 1980a). "Peach group name police on 'wanted' poster". The Times. p. 1.
  • Timmins, Nicholas (28 May 1980b). "Tighter police control urged in Peach misadventure verdict". The Times. pp. 1–2.
  • "A Verdict of Misadventure with Riders". Leader. The Times. 28 May 1980. p. 15.

Internet and audio visual media

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