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On the evening of 21st November 1974, bombs planted by the IRA in two crowded Birmingham pubs exploded, killing 21 people and injuring at least 220. Within a day of the explosion, six men – Paddy Hill, Gerry Hunter, Richard McIlkenny, Billy Power, Johnny Walker and Hughie Callaghan – were arrested and charged. All were found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment. Fast forward 16 years, the Birmingham six as they were known, were sensationally released. They had been imprisoned for a crime they did not commit and their release brought not only their freedom, but lasting and positive changes to the criminal justice system.

Their release was in the main due the forensic work of investigative journalist and former Labour MP, Chris Mullin, who also identified three of the four real bombers.

To mark the 50th anniversary Chris spoke at a meeting organised by the Bar Council and hosted by the City Law School and Department of Journalism at City University, in Islington on 20 November.

The meeting took the form of a question and answer session. Leading the questions to Chris was Sarah Kavanagh, Head of Media and Communications at the Bar Council. Members of the audience also questioned the former MP for Sunderland South who left Parliament in 2010.

Setting the scene for the questions, the audience was shown the start of one of the three documentaries made for Granada Television’s ‘World in Action’ hard hitting prime time current affairs programmes, which highlighted the flaws in the case in order to prove the innocence of the six.

Asked why he got involved Mr Mullin explained that he was tipped off about potential flaws in the case by a Guardian journalist friend Peter Chippindale, who had covered the Birmingham trials and thought they had got the wrong people. Although at the time he was an impoverished journalist, he started on his remarkable journey to expose the wrongful convictions.

He told the meeting that he followed the Birmingham case as it wound its way through the courts and eventually found a publisher, Chatto and Windus, who commissioned him to write a book on his findings. It wasn’t until 1985 that he persuaded Ray Fitzwalter, editor of World in Action, to take him on temporarily to see if they could boost the campaign. The programmes had an impact: the first demolished the forensic evidence, the second damaged the police evidence and the third was an interview with one of the actual bombers who was heavily disguised. The programmes also revealed that the six were beaten, threatened and terrified by the police, and deprived of sleep and food until false confessions were signed.

A Court of Appeal hearing in 1988 upheld the convictions, a major set-back for the campaign. By then Chris was the Labour MP for Sunderland South and able to take his campaign into Parliament where he managed to get some allies among Conservative MPs (including Nicholas Soames, a grandson of Sir Winston Churchill).

Finally the guilty verdicts were quashed by the Court of Appeal at the second attempt on 14 March 1991.

Chris explained that this, however, was not the end of the matter. Sections of the legal and judicial establishment continued to snipe and mutter against the decision and early in 2022 the West Midlands Police applied for an order under the Terrorism Act 2000 requiring Mr Mullin to disclose material relating to his investigations into the bombings. https://www.nuj.org.uk/resource/chris-mullin-to-contest-order-under-terrorism-act.html

With the support of his union, the National Union of Journalists, who he praised at the meeting for their support, he fought the case on the grounds that to disclose the material requested would be a fundamental breach of the principle that journalists must protect their sources. https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/news/birmingham-six-terrorism-act/

On 22 March 2022, the case was thrown out by His Honour Judge Mark Lucraft QC Recorder of the London Central Criminal Court. https://www.nuj.org.uk/resource/chris-mullin-protection-of-sources-judgment.html

Error of Judgement: The Birmingham Bombings and the Scandal That Shook Britain by Chris Mullin is published by Monoray (February 2024)

Post Script: On its 50th anniversary relatives of those killed in and injured in the Birmingham pub bombings have urged the government to set up a statutory inquiry.  Renewing their calls for a public inquiry, they say that “England’s biggest unsolved mass murder of the 20th century” should be at the top of the government’s list. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/nov/21/pm-must-prioritise-birmingham-pub-bombings-inquiry-say-victims-families