2 January - Controversial judge
James Pickles sentences 19-year-old
Huddersfield supermarket cashier Tracey Scott, who has a 10-week-old baby, to six months in prison after she admitted helping shoplifters. Judge Pickles defends his controversial decision to jail Ms Scott by saying that he needed to let women know that they could not avoid custody just by becoming pregnant.
13 January - Some 50,000 people demonstrate on the streets of London support of Britain's ambulance workers, as the ongoing ambulance crew strike has yet to end four months after it began.
16 January - Tracey Scott is freed after serving 14 days of her prison sentence.
19 January - Police in
Johannesburg,
South Africa break up a demonstration against the cricket match played by rebel English cricketers led by
Mike Gatting.[1]
29 January - Lord Justice Taylor publishes his report in the Hillsborough disaster, which claimed the lives of 95
Liverpool F.C. supporters on 15 April last year. He recommends that all top division stadiums are all-seater by 1994 and that the rest of the
Football League follows suit by 1999.
February
20 February - Three people are injured in
Leicester city centre by a bomb explosion.
March
9 March - 37 people are arrested and 10 police officers injured in
Brixton,
London, during rioting against the new
Community Charge.
May - The second phase of the landmark
Nissan car factory near
Sunderland is opened, four years after the first phase, to prepare for production of the
Bluebird replacement, the
Primera, which goes on sale this autumn.[5]
17 May - Manchester United equal the record total for FA Cup wins by winning the final replay 1-0 against Crystal Palace. Defender Lee Martin scores the only goal of the game.
24 May -
Bobby Robson announces that he will be leaving his job as England football manager after this summer's World Cup to take charge of the Dutch club PSV Eindhoven.
25 May - The "rump" Social Democratic Party (consisting of members who backed out of the merger with the Liberal Party which formed the
Liberal Democrats two years ago) finishes behind the
Monster Raving Loony Party in the
Bootle by-election, where Labour retain power under new MP
Michael Carr.
1 June - An army recruit is shot dead and two others are wounded by two suspected IRA gunmen in
Lichfield,
Staffordshire.
7 June - Swindon Town are found guilty on 36 charges of financial irregularities and their promotion to the First Division is replaced with relegation to the Third Division, with Sunderland being promoted in their place and their place in the Second Division being given to Tranmere Rovers.
17 June - Over 20,000 Swindon Town football fans demonstrate on the streets of
Swindon in a bid for promotion to the First Division to be restored.
22 June - Housing Minister
Michael Spicer announces a £15million plan to tackle homelessness.
4 July - England's chances of winning the World Cup are ended by a penalty shoot-out defeat at the hand of West Germany in the semi-finals.
10 July - FIFA announces that the ban on English clubs following the Heysel disaster five years ago will be lifted following the good behaviour of English fans at the World Cup; however, not all of the English league's European places will be restored immediately.
Aston Villa, the league runners-up, will be England's sole entrants in the
UEFA Cup, while FA Cup winners Manchester United will compete in the European Cup Winners' Cup and league champions Liverpool - the team whose rioting at the 1985 European Cup final resulted in the ban - will have to serve at least one extra year, meaning that there will be no English representation at the
1990-91 European Cup.
15 July - The Football Association names
Graham Taylor as the new England manager. Taylor, 46, recently took Aston Villa to second place in the English league, and also reached an FA Cup final with his previous club Watford.
16 July -
Nigel Mansell, England's most successful racing driver of the last 10 years, announces that he is to retire from Grand Prix races at the end of the 1990 season.
Michael Car, Labour MP for Bootle, dies after just 57 days in parliament from a heart attack at the age of 43.
30 July - IRA car bomb kills British MP
Ian Gow, a staunch unionist, after he assured the IRA that the British government would never surrender to them.
7 August - The winding-up order on Aldershot FC is lifted when 19-year-old property developer Spencer Trethewy pledges a £200,000 rescue package for the
Hampshire-based club.
25 August -
Marks & Spencer closes its
Dudley and
West Bromwich stores, the latest casualties in the new trend of leading retailers abandoning traditional town centres for out-of-town relocations; a replacement for both stores will open at the nearby
Merry Hill Shopping Centre on 23 October.
18 September – Air Chief Marshal
Sir Peter Terry survives a murder attempt by IRA terrorists at his home near
Stafford.[9]
October
18 October – Eastbourne by-election in
East Sussex:
David Bellotti for the Liberal Democrats wins the "safe" Conservative seat.
November
8 November – The second Bootle by-election of the year sees Labour hold onto the seat once more with new MP
Joe Benton gaining nearly 80% of the votes.
12 November – The Football Association penalises
Arsenal two points and Manchester United one point and fines both clubs £50,000 for a mass player brawl in a Football League match between the two clubs last month at Old Trafford.
26 November – Plastic surgeons Michael Masser and Kenneth Patton are murdered in
Wakefield, West Yorkshire.
December
3 December – The mother of Gail Kinchin is awarded £8,000 in
High Court, a decade after her pregnant 16-year-old daughter was killed by a police marksman who intervened with a siege at the
Birmingham flat where she was being held hostage by her boyfriend.
[2]
13 December - Russell Bishop is sentenced to life imprisonment (with a recommended minimum of 15 years) for the abduction, indecent assault and attempted murder of a seven-year-old girl in
Brighton earlier this year. Bishop, 24, was cleared of murdering two other girls in 1987.
19 December –
Tony Adams, the Arsenal captain and England defender, is sentenced to four months in prison for a drink-driving offence committed in Southend-on-Sea on 6 May this year.