JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
JUSTICE FOR THE 96 KILLED 15 4 1989
If this weren’t the case, It’s quite likely that the grieving and the marking of anniversaries would not have quite the same prominence as it has. It would still be large and significant, because we mark in particular those tragedies which seem to touch us, and this one touched two large and particular groups: people who are from Liverpool and people who are football supporters.
But mostly, you know, it was the lies, and the acceptability of the lies, the way it’s considered all right to repeat these lies and the way it’s considered acceptable to attack people for grieving. That’s what gives this one event its particular magnitude. That’s why if you talk to many people from Liverpool, or many people who were involved in football supporters’ organisations at the time, you’ll notice how angry they still are. Because from too many people, there was no respect for them and no respect for the dead.”
20 years on from The Hillsbouge disaster, we should never forgive nor forget, and those who acted as they did are free to collect there pensions, those they killed on that are not, from Ian Tomlison to Blair Peach, this is how the working class are treated, like scum.
Victims of lessons unlearned from Burnden Park, from Ibrox, from Bradford Valley Parade. Victims of a mentality that saw normal people who love football as turnstile fodder who’d pay to watch their team in intolerably unsafe conditions. Victims of a police culture which saw football fans as a problem to be contained rather than human beings who deserved to be kept safe at the match. They just wanted to support their team with their families and their mates and trusted the host club and the authorities to know what they were doing.
The police, clubs and football authorities were warned. 25 people died at Ibrox in 1902 when terracing collapsed, 33 crushed to death at Burnden Park in 1946, 66 crushed on the stairway at Ibrox in 1971, 56 burned alive at Valley Parade in 1985. Countless other smaller incidents and near misses, including a similar incident at the same end of Hillsborough in 1981 when the only reason there weren’t fatalities was that fans could escape onto the pitch as the crush developed. Yet still football clubs opened decrepit and unsafe grounds to fans week by week, local authorities allowed safety certificates to go unrenewed (Hillsborough’s was ten years out of date in1989), the FA awarded big fixtures to places which were little more than death traps and the police treated fans like animals, part of Thatcher’s ‘enemy within’ rather than human beings to be respected.
Chief Superintendent Duckenfield retired on a full police pension, never to be called to account for his criminally negligent handling of the match. Following Duckenfield’s retirement on medical grounds, Superintendent Bernard Murray avoided charges as it was thought unfair to call him to account if Duckenfield had avoided it.The collective exercise in arse covering by the South Yorkshire Police started not long after 3:15pm, as fans were still lay dying on the pitch, when Duckenfield told the FA’s Graham Kelly that Liverpool fans had forced the gates open to enter the ground - gates he had ordered to be opened himself just half an hour earlier. The smears, which went on to include questioning grieving relatives about their dead’s drinking habits and off the record briefings to the press about the alleged behaviour of Liverpool fans before and during the tragedy - rebutted by every independent witness to the events - began even as the bodies were still piled up on the terraces. By contrast, the Major Incident Plan was never put into action and hospital staff were left to come in as they heard about what had happened on the news rather than being called in immediately.
The Taylor inquiry into the disaster named the primary cause of the tragedy as the failure of police control, yet even to this day people will still swear blind that the fans must have been responsible for their own deaths. Even in the face of practically all the available evidence of police lies, incompetence and the co-ordination of statements to tone down the chaos amongst those supposed to be keeping people safe and talk up the alleged out of control mob which seemingly only the South Yorkshire Police saw, the dead, injured and traumatised are slandered and libeled as hooligans who caused their own demise.
(notes)
For an html copy goto http://projectsheffield.wordpress.com/2009/04/15/justice-for-the-96-dont-buy-the-sun-the-hillsborough-football-disaster-context-consequences/
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