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Spycops considered future Labour peer Peter Hain's 1969 anti-apartheid campaign a ‘huge’ risk
Peter Hain and fellow supporters of the Anti-Apartheid movement when they demonstrated outside Barclays Bank in Putney in 1977

by Bethany Rielly

AN ANTI-APARTHEID campaign led by future Labour peer Peter Hain was targeted by spycops because it was considered to pose a “huge” risk of violence and public disorder, the Undercover Policing Inquiry heard today. 

The Stop the ’70 Tour (STST) was founded in 1969 to stop tours by the all-white South African rugby and cricket teams.  

The campaign, led by a 19-year-old Mr Hain, involved protesters peacefully rushing the pitch and handcuffing themselves to goalposts to disrupt sports matches. 

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