Hillsborough Inquest: At the end of the storm is a golden sky!
Twenty seven years in waiting and finally justice is served. That’s one hell of an extensive period of time, right? And that is precisely how long it took for truth to unfold in one of the longest inquests in the British legal history.
On April 15, 1989, thousands of fans went to watch their beloved team play a football match out of which 96 never came back home. Anyone who is acquainted with me knows I am a diehard Liverpool supporter and have been so ever since I was a kid.
Back in 1989, I was pretty young but still as passionate as a passionate Red can be. But with round-the-clock sports channels and internet still being distant dreams, the fire to my Liverpool obsession was fuelled by my dad regularly updating me of the club’s news. So naturally, it was he who informed me on how my team got affected by the events that unravelled at the Hillsborough Stadium on that fateful day in May of 1989.
I distinctly recall my first reaction to the news. It was a mixture of incredulity and utter bewilderment. I simply couldn’t wrap my tiny little head around the fact as to how fans who went to a football game to cheer for their club, died doing the same. Death, as we all would agree, was a pretty big deal back then. Back in those times, we weren’t so desensitised to the loss of human life as much as we are currently.
I kept thinking about the whole Hillsborough incident for days. I thought about all those who lost their lives cheering for the team they loved – the team that I loved.
In my infantile mind, all those who passed away were the true fans, the real heroes. After all, sacrificing your life for a cause, regardless of the reasons involved, is an act worthy of the highest praise possible.
Little did my little self know how these very heroes who perished away in the most horrific of circumstances were being demonised by the authorities at that time. They said those who died, did so because they were “animals” who were heavily drunk and behaving badly.
Ever since that terrible day, these lies kept on being regurgitated by the police, politicians and some of the press, with former police Chief David Duckenfield being the pantomime villain. It was only last week, when truth came out and justice finally prevailed.
I can't watch TV news coverage #hillsboroughinquest tonight. Imagine how families feel. When the state lies about how your child died.
— Shelagh Fogarty (@ShelaghFogarty) April 26, 2016
Lord Faulkner "This is greatest miscarriage of justice ever, but it's also the greatest fightback ever" #hillsboroughinquest
— Jeff Goulding (@ShanklysBoys1) April 26, 2016
#Hillsborough #hillsboroughinquest Am actually crying. Imagine losing yr kid at footy match and then having the whole state against you.
— Liz Kershaw (@LizKershawDJ) April 26, 2016
Getting it tragically wrong through incompetence is one issue lying about it to blame others for deaths is unforgivable #hillsboroughinquest
— Clive Chamberlain (@MrCliveC) April 26, 2016
Margaret Aspinall says she wants late son James to sleep well for the first time in 27 years #hillsboroughinquest pic.twitter.com/REPgOP6qzp
— Rich McCarthy (@VJRichMcCarthy) April 26, 2016
The 27-year battle for justice by families of those killed at Hillsborough was vindicated on April 26, 2016, after a jury found the 96 victims of the 1989 disaster were unlawfully killed and that Liverpool fans had played no part whatsoever in the causes of the disaster.
'Fans behaviour did not cause deaths.' Vindication at last. #hillsboroughinquest
— Nihal Arthanayake (@TherealNihal) April 26, 2016
#hillsboroughinquest jury - 96 were unlawfully killed https://t.co/gllSrVbXg2 pic.twitter.com/xlrZcNCHyu
— South Wales Argus (@southwalesargus) April 26, 2016
As I sat watching the events unfold on my computer screen, I had goosebumps all over. We have been fighting these lies for the best part of almost three decades now and finally justice has been served.
https://twitter.com/FBAwayDays/status/724937214812143617
The jury also unanimously found that the disaster had been caused by appalling institutional failings. A verdict which could see Mr Duckenfield, the man who was commanding officer on the day of the tragedy, stand trial for manslaughter.
Finally ! #JFT96 #LFC #JusticeForThe96 #Hillsboroughinquest #Hillsborough
— Cine Sardar (@CineSardar) April 26, 2016
This is the same person who for all these years tried to shift the blame by accusing Liverpool fans of forcing a gate in a drunken state, which caused the crush.
The deaths were ruled accidental at the end of the original 1991 inquest into the incident. But that verdict were quashed following the 2012 Hillsborough Independent Panel Report, which concluded that police colluded with the establishment to avoid the blame for what happened in a major cover-up.
In spite of all the sh*t thrown at them for almost three decades, the tireless campaign by the bereaved families has been one class act. In the face of despair, they kept fighting for what they knew was the truth while rallying us. Real heroes of our time!
When you walk through a storm, hold your head up high
And don’t be afraid of the dark
At the end of the storm, there’s a golden sky
And the sweet, silver song of a lark
Walk on through the wind
Walk on through the rain
Though your dreams be tossed and blown
Walk on, walk on
With hope in your heart
And you’ll never walk alone
You’ll never walk alone
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