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UK to hold an inquiry into the Battle of Orgreave, a 40-year-old miners' strike

Britain announced on Monday that it will hold an investigation into the "Battle of Orgreave", which was a violent confrontation in 1984 between police and striking miners at the height of the year-long dispute with Margaret Thatcher’s government.

At the Orgreave Coking Plant near Sheffield, northern England, more than 5,000 strikers clashed against a similar amount of riot officers who were drafted from all over the country.

The scene was violent and pivotal in the strike against Thatcher’s decision to close the money-losing mines. The miners lost their fight to save the industry.

Police have been accused of excessive violence and brutality at Orgreave, on 18 June 1984. Television footage showed officers riding on horses and a miner repeatedly being hit on the head by a baton.

Over 120 people were initially injured, and 95 miner arrests and charges of rioting and violent disorder. All charges were later dropped once the evidence was dismissed.

For years, campaigners have demanded to know the identity of those responsible for the large deployment of police officers and their tactics as well as the fate of some official documents.

Home Secretary Yvette cooper - Britain's Interior Minister whose Labour Party was in opposition during the strike – said that an investigation would be conducted by Pete Wilcox - the Bishop of Sheffield - to discover the truth.

She said, "The violent scenes that followed and the subsequent prosecutions raised questions we haven't answered for decades. We must now determine what happened."

Kate Flannery of the Orgreave Truth & Justice Campaign said that they had to make sure the inquiry was able to access all police and government documents.

She said, "We've waited for this day for a very long time and it is a really good news." (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens; Michael Holden)

(source: Reuters)