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Sentences announced in Britain's "Donnygate" Labour
Party corruption case
By Harvey Thompson
28 March 2002
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Prison sentences were announced this month, in what has been
described as the worst local government corruption case since
the 1970s. One of the most comprehensive police investigations
into council fraud ever carried out has resulted in two senior
Labour Party councillors in Doncaster, South Yorkshire and a property
developer being sentenced to a total of 11 years in jail.
In total five people were convicted, including Peter Birks,
the former head of council planning, and former mayor and council
deputy leader Raymond Stockhill, who took bribes to process a
planning application. Others, including John Dainty, the leader
of the councils Conservative Party group, were cleared of
corruption in this case but face further allegations.
The financial scandal originated with dealings between property
developer Alan Hughes and Birks and Stockhill. Hughes business
was in dire straits when he bribed Birks and Stockhill to process
a planning application for land protected against development.
In 1992, with debts mounting to more than £6 million
and his business failing, Hughes applied to develop land known
as Poppyfields in Branton, South Yorkshire, but his application
was rejected. He knew Birks and his lifelong friend Stockhill
and felt that they could influence the planning committee. He
lavished around £30,000 on Stockhill, and gave a £160,000
farmhouse to Birks and his wife. A few months later his second
application, despite being virtually identical to the first, was
granted. Hughes later sold the land for £2.25 million, thus
saving his business.
Hughes was sentenced to jail for five years, Birks for four
years and Stockhill, for two years. Stockhills sentence
was later suspended to one year, because he has suffered a stroke
and a heart attack and is deemed to have a maximum life expectancy
of five years. Hughess common-law wife, Stephanie Higginson,
and his financial adviser, Gordon Armitage, were found guilty
of aiding and abetting corruption and were given a 160 hours community
service sentence and a one-year jail term respectively.
The court also heard how the investigation had uncovered five
other occasions where Stockhill and Birks had supported plans
by Hughes against the advice of officials. In one case Hughes
made a profit of £150,000 in a day as a result of a planning
decision.
The case against the two top-level councillors does not tell
the full story. They have been described as the tip of a vast
pyramid of corruption, or as one newspaper termed it a rotten
network. Doncaster has been under police investigation for
fraud since 1997, involving councillors taking expenses for foreign
trips and purchasing racehorses. The financial embezzlement is
reported to run into millions. The investigation into the scandal
brought about 74 arrests and 23 Labour councillors have so far
been convicted for expenses fraud. Also implicated are two former
town mayors. None of the towns 21 districts (wards) was
left unaffected. Included in the 74 arrests was councillor Malcolm
Glover, who was appointed as a clean pair of hands
after the scandal broke five years ago.
In passing sentence at Nottingham Crown Court, Justice Hunt,
said the corruption scandaldubbed somewhat unimaginatively
as Donnygatehad betrayed the publics trust:
Public life requires a standard of its own. Power corrupts
and corruption in government by those elected by the public strikes
at its integrity and at the root of democracy. Fortunately it
is rare in this country.
The judges summation was a mixture of public hand-wringing
and a clumsy whitewash. To limit the financial wrongdoing to a
few individuals and seek to draw a line under it is convenient
for many in public office today. But contrary to the statement
of Justice Hunt this case is far from being an aberration. Even
as it was breaking in the news in 1999, less than a 10 minutes
drive away from Doncaster in neighbouring Labour Party-dominated
Rotherham council another scandal was emerging. Rotherham councillors
had set up an initiative ostensibly to deal with the towns
dire poverty. But investigations uncovered that appointed officials
had received salaries of up to £100,000, while the organisation
had failed to draw up a single working policy to combat poverty.
After years of very high level cases of Tory sleaze and financial
malpractice, the Blair Labour government, on entering office,
sought to capitalise on the public revulsion against such conduct.
Not only have events since demonstrated the hypocrisy of Prime
Minister Tony Blairs claims of transparent government,
they have shown how far back the internal rot in the Labour party
goes. In the nearly two decades when the Labour Party was in opposition,
many of its local representatives were busy creating small fortunes
for themselves through all manner of covert business deals and
kick-backs.
With the overwhelming hostility of the local population towards
Tory officials, many Labour councillors saw their tenure as almost
assured. They looked upon their administrations as akin to personal
fiefdoms. The corruption cases in both Doncaster and Rotherham
council may never have come to light. The latter was only stumbled
upon due other allegations. The fact that Doncaster and Rotherham
are located in an area devastated by two decades of industrial
decline in such areas as coal and steel simply underlines the
gross political opportunism that has always characterised the
Labour Party.
Labour Party headquarters may seek to dismiss such corrupt
practices as an example of Old Labour and even seek
to clamp down on such practices in local government. But they
do so only in order to concretise their new and more overt sponsorship
by big business. The number of scandalssuch as its agreeing
to abandon the outlawing of tobacco advertising in motor racing
following a £1 million donation from formula one tycoon
Bernie Ecclestonethat have dogged the government have demonstrated
that it is only a change in price tag on Labour policy.
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