The Waco siege – 30 years on

More than 80 people died in a 51-day stand-off in 1993 between federal agents and fringe-religious group the Branch Davidians

Thirty years ago on 19 April, 1993, a huge fire engulfed the Mount Carmel Center compound 13 miles outside of Waco, Texas, ending a 51-day stand-off between the government agents and a fringe-religious group, the Branch Davidians.

The shoot-out between the group and the authorities was the “largest gunfight on American soil since the civil war”, said The Guardian, and the resulting stand-off was a “diplomatic tightrope walk played out on a public stage”. After the fire burned out, more than 80 people including children and federal agents had died.

Richard Windsor is a freelance writer for The Week Digital. He began his journalism career writing about politics and sport while studying at the University of Southampton. He then worked across various football publications before specialising in cycling for almost nine years, covering major races including the Tour de France and interviewing some of the sport’s top riders. He led Cycling Weekly’s digital platforms as editor for seven of those years, helping to transform the publication into the UK’s largest cycling website. He now works as a freelance writer, editor and consultant.