Paddy Hill, one of the men wrongly convicted of IRA attacks on pubs in Birmingham in 1974, has died at the age of 80. Mr Hill was among a group of men from Northern Ireland jailed for the atrocity who became known as the Birmingham Six.
Some 21 people were killed in explosions at two Birmingham city centre pubs in November 1974.
The Birmingham Six spent almost two decades in prison for the bombings before their convictions were quashed in 1991. The Miscarriages of Justice Organisation said in a post on its Facebook page that Mr Hill died peacefully at home on Monday morning. “It is with great sorrow Paddy died this morning peacefully at home. Our condolences to his family at this sad time. We ask that you respect the family’s privacy.”
Mr Hill founded the group in 2001 to help others.
Golden visa shutdown came after officials warned of potentially ‘unlawful’ and ‘unethical’ practices
Tang restaurant review: Delicious food, charming service, keen prices ... this is in a league of its own
‘Everyone expects us to get married and it feels like an unstoppable train’
Households to receive €125 energy credit from tomorrow, while social welfare payments and minimum wage increase
Just three of the Birmingham Six are still alive – Gerry Hunter, John Walker and Billy Power. Hugh Callaghan died in 2023 and Richard McIlkenny in 2006. – PA