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Peter Hain




The Right Honourable Peter Gerald Hain (born February 16 , 1950 in Nairobi, Kenya ) is a British Labour Party Politician .

He is MP for Neath in Wales and sits in the Cabinet as Secretary Of State For Northern Ireland and Secretary Of State For Wales .

He came to the UK from South Africa as a teenager, and was a noted anti- Apartheid campaigner in the 1970s .

Peter Hain was born to South African parents in Nairobi , Kenya . His parents were anti-Apartheid activists in the South African Liberal Party , for which they were made "banned persons", briefly jailed, and prevented from working. Friends of the Hain family formed a small terrorist group, the Armed Resistance Movement (ARM). One of ARM's best known attacks was the planting of a bomb which exploded at Johannesburg station in July 1964, killing two innocent passers-by. A Hain family friend, John Harris, 25, was arrested and convicted of planting the bomb. Harris' wife, Ann, and their young son, David, went to live with the Hains in the run-up to the trial. The 15 year old Peter Hain personally delivered the eulogy at the service for John Harris after his execution by the South African government.

In 1966 the family fled South Africa and settled in London , where Peter's father Walter Hain made a living as an architect. Peter became chairman of the Stop The Seventy Tour Campaign which disrupted tours by the South African Rugby Union and Cricket teams in 1969 and 1970 . A 1972 private prosecution brought by Francis Bennion in regard to his leadership of the illegal direct action interference with the tours resulted in a ten day Old Bailey Trial with the jury failing to agree on three charges and hence he was acquitted on those charges, but Peter Hain was found guilty of Criminal Conspiracy and fined £200. He appealed against the conviction in 1973. The Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal with costs. As reported in the Daily Telegraph of October 23 1973, the court said his conviction was ‘fully justified’. Lord Justice Roskill said Mr Hain had not elected to give evidence, adding ‘He gave no explanation of his part over the incidents with which he was charged’. In 1976 he was tried for, and acquitted of, a 1974 bank robbery, allegedly having been framed by South African intelligence agents. He joined the Liberal Party and was elected president of the Young Liberals , but in 1977 switched to Labour. The same year, he was a founder of the Anti-Nazi League .

Hain worked as a researcher for the Union Of Communication Workers , rising to become their head of research before being elected to the House Of Commons at a by-election in 1991 . In 1995 he became a Labour Whip and in 1996 became shadow employment minister. After Labour's victory in the 1997 General Election he joined the government, first at the Welsh Office, then as minister for Africa at the Foreign And Commonwealth Office .

Robert Mugabe , whom he had supported in the struggle against white minority rule, attacked him as a "racist" for backing Zimbabwe 's white Farmer s' rights.

He moved briefly to the Department Of Trade And Industry before returning to the Foreign Office as minister for Europe . He was vocal in advocating joint sovereignty of Gibraltar with Spain , leading to him being reviled in the colony, which overwhelmingly rejected Sovereignty in a referendum in November 2002 . In October 2002, he joined the Cabinet as Secretary Of State For Wales , but continued to represent the UK at the Convention On The Future Of Europe . In June 2003 he was made Leader Of The House Of Commons and Lord Privy Seal
in a cabinet reshuffle, but retained the Wales portfolio. In November 2004 Hain caused controversy among his political rivals when he claimed that "If we are tough on Crime and on Terrorism , as Labour is, then I think Britain will be safer under Labour". On 6 May 2005 , following the 2005 General Election , Hain was appointed as Secretary Of State For Northern Ireland , retaining his Welsh position also. Although previously a supporter of Irish Unity , he has since retreated from this position.


PUBLICATIONS

  • ''Don't Play with Apartheid: Background to the Stop the Seventy Tour Campaign'' by Peter Hain, 1971, Allen & U ISBN 0043010318

  • ''Radical Liberalism and Youth Politics'' by Peter Hain, 1973, Liberal Publications Department ISBN 0900520361

  • ''Radical Regeneration'' by Peter Hain, 1975, Quartet Books ISBN 070431231X

  • ''Community Politics'' Edited by Peter Hain, 1976, Calder Publications Ltd ISBN 0714535435

  • ''Mistaken Identity: The Wrong Face of the Law'' by Peter Hain, 1976, Quartet Books ISBN 0704331160

  • ''Radicals and Socialism'' by Peter Hain and Simon Hebditch, 1978, Institute for Workers' Control ISBN 0901740551

  • ''Policing the Police'' Edited by Peter Hain, 1979, J Calder ISBN 0714536245

  • ''Debate of the Decade: The Crisis and Future of the Left'' edited by Peter Hain, 1980, Pluto Press ISBN 0861043138

  • ''Neighbourhood Participation'' by Peter Hain, 1980, M. T. Smith ISBN 0851171982

  • ''Policing the Police'' Edited by Peter Hain, 1980, J Calder ISBN 0714537969

  • ''Reviving the Labour Party'' by Peter Hain, 1980, Institute for Workers' Control ISBN 0901740691

  • ''The Democratic Alternative: A Socialist Response to Britain's Crisis'' by Peter Hain, 1983, Penguin Books Ltd ISBN 0140069550

  • ''Political Trials in Britain'' by Peter Hain, 1985, Penguin Books Ltd ISBN 0140079351

  • ''Political Strikes: The State and Trade Unionism in Britain'' by Peter Hain, 1986, Penguin Books Ltd ISBN 0140079629

  • ''Proportional Misrepresentation'' by Peter Hain, 1986, Gower Publishing Ltd ISBN 0704505266

  • ''A Putney Plot?'' by Peter Hain, 1987, Spokesman Books ISBN 0851244815

  • ''Ayes to the Left'' by Peter Hain, 1995, Lawrence & Wishart Ltd ISBN 0853158320

  • ''The Peking Connection'' by Peter Hain, 1995, Lawrence & Wishart Ltd ISBN 0853158231

  • ''Sing the Beloved Country: Struggle for the New South Africa'' by Peter Hain, 1996, Pluto Press ISBN 0745309976

  • ''The End of Foreign Policy?'' by Robin Cook and Peter Hain, 2001, Royal Institute of International Affairs ISBN 1862031312

  • ''New Designs for Europe'' by Katinkya Barysch, Steven Everts, Heather Grabbe et al, introduction by Peter Hain, 2002, Centre for European Reform ISBN 1901229351

  • ''The Future Party'' by Peter Hain and Ian McCartney , 2004, Catalyst Press ISBN 1904508103



EXTERNAL LINKS



  Title Member Of Parliament for Neath
  Start 1991
  Before Donald Coleman


  Title Secretary Of State For Wales
  Start 2002
  Before Paul Murphy


  Title1 Lord Privy Seal
  Before1 The Lord Williams Of Mostyn
  Years1 2003&ndash2005
  Title2 Leader Of The House Of Commons
  Before2 John Reid
  Years2 2003&ndash2005
  After Geoff Hoon


  Title Secretary Of State For Northern Ireland
  Start 2005
  Before Paul Murphy


  Title United Kingdom Order Of Precedence <br>(gentlemen)<br>(Northern Ireland)
  Before The Rt Hon Michael Martin
  After Khaled Al Duwaisan