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Tory councillor used photo of tragedy which claimed the lives of 116 children to make point on social media

Wednesday, 13 May 2026 08:34

By Joe Willis, Local Democracy Reporter

North Yorkshire Council member Tom Jones

A Conservative councillor has apologised after using a photo of a tragedy which claimed the lives of 116 children to make a point on social media.

North Yorkshire Council member Tom Jones this week posted an image showing the aftermath of the 1966 Aberfan disaster on X.

The tragedy saw a colliery spoil tip collapse onto the Welsh village of Aberfan after heavy rain in October 21, 1966.

The landslide claimed 144 lives after engulfing a junior school and nearby homes.

It appears the councillor used the photo to make a point during an online debate on great men in English history.

Social media users quickly pointed out the origins of the image, and he deleted the post before issuing an apology.

It read:

“Completely (sic) unreserved apology to anyone I offended with the earlier photo I posted – I simply googled coal meme and that one came up.”

Cllr Jones declined to comment further when approached by the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

The word ‘coal’ can be used as a term to describe a social media post believed to be of low-quality.

The Conservative leader of the council, Councillor Carl Les, said Cllr Jones should explain his use of the photo.

Councillor Peter Lacey, the Liberal Democrat leader of the opposition on the authority, said he was “disappointed” when he saw the post.

He added:

“Whilst the Aberfan disaster seems a long time ago and many miles away, being a six-year-old child in a school less than 20 miles from Aberfan at the time, I know the impact on families and local communities in the area was immense, with scars still present.

“I am glad that Cllr Jones has deleted the post and apologised, but the harm has been done and the insensitive nature of his use of this incident in this way casts serious doubt on his judgement as a councillor.”

Cllr Jones, member for the Scotton and Lower Wensleydale division, was previously the subject of a 16-month complaints process after he appeared to push down a colleague’s hand during a vote in 2023.

The authority’s Standards and Governance Committee Hearings Panel found that the councillor had “appeared to have been too heavy-handed” with fellow Tory, Councillor Bridget Fortune.

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