"Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six" proved to be hugely controversial. The group performed the song on the
Channel 4 show
Friday Night Live on 15 April 1988, but the show cut to
advertising before the song was finished. James Fearnley, biographer of
The Pogues, wrote that the band had said in advance that they would be performing and performed the song in a camera rehearsal, without any comment being made. The song was subsequently banned from being broadcast by the British
Independent Broadcasting Authority under laws which were also responsible for a
ban on the broadcasting of direct interviews with members of
Sinn Féin and other groups. The IBA said the song alleged that "convicted terrorists are not guilty, the
Irish people were put at a disadvantage in the
courts of the United Kingdom and that it may have invited support for a terrorist organisation such as the
IRA". In 1991, the Birmingham Six were released after having their convictions overturned in the
Court of Appeal and the allegations of torture at the hands of authorities were vindicated. The convictions of the Guildford Four — also mentioned in the song — had already been overturned in 1989. The song's ban was subsequently lifted, yet when it featured on a
Channel 4 documentary in the early 1990s the channel was still not allowed to play the song, only to show the words on screen. ==References==