Momentum Builds For Full Release of Hillsborough Documents

By: Noel | October 17th, 2011
   
anfield hillsborough memorial

As parliament prepares to debate the full release of documents relating to Hillsborough and the long-suspended dominos begin to fall, momentum building towards what seems more and more an inevitable release of what has shamefully been kept hidden for far too long, it’s been a nervous day of remembrance and retrospect for many just as much as one of cautious hope for the future.

As papers around England offer up their retrospectives and lecherous populists at TalkSport indulge in the likes of Hillsborough Week, perhaps the most through and meaningful distillation of the ongoing tragedy comes by way of a heartfelt op-ed in the Mirror by Labour MP Andy Burnham. Including passages from previously unreleased documents, one of the politicians leading the charge for the release of all documents relating to Hillsborough in recent years brilliantly examines a dissaster made all the worse by its being dragged out over more than two decades now:

In dusty box files in the House of Lords, there are thousands of badly photocopied papers.

They look inconsequential. They are anything but.

The boxes contain personal ­statements from police officers who witnessed at first hand one of the biggest peacetime disasters in our country’s history. They are painful to read, so terrible are the scenes they describe.

One in particular stands out. It is the hand-written statement of PC 227 from Woodseats Police Station. These are his ­recollections in those crucial moments just after 3pm on April 15 1989:

“I realised a great tragedy had occurred. I began to feel myself being overcome with emotion, but soon realised I would be of no use to anyone if I felt sorry for myself.

“I was assisted out of the terracing and onto the pitch. I saw several officers wandering about in a dazed and confused state.

“Some were crying and some simply sat on the grass. Members of the public were running about with boarding ferrying people from the pitch to the far end of the ground.”

Even those files he has seen don’t begin to scratch the surface of what has been hidden from the public’s view, yet if passages such as the above had come out at the time of the disaster, one might have expected its aftermath—and in particular the slander and slant against its victims—to have been rather different. But stories such as PC 227’s weren’t the public face of government and authority as they reacted to the tragedy, with a note from a more senior officer attached to the above statement encapsulating all that was wrong in it at the time and all that those seeking justice have been pushing against for the past two decades:

“Last 2 pages require amending. These are his own ­feelings. He also states that PCs were sat down crying when the fans were carrying the dead and injured. This shows they were ­organised and we were not. Have PC rewrite last 2 pages excluding the points mentioned.”

That fight for justice so many have struggled at may not quite be over yet, but it appears to have picked up an undeniable momentum as the debate triggered by a government e-petition signed by 140,000 plus Britons, set for the early evening today in London, approaches. A just released statement from a Home Office spokesman speaks to the level that momentum has built to even before the actual debate has had a chance to take place:

All papers had previously been shared with the Hillsborough Independent Panel. The government is happy for all the papers, including Cabinet papers, to be released as soon as the panel so decides, in consultation with the families. We expect them to be shared with the Hillsborough families first and then to the wider public.

Today’s decision—one fully expected to be in line with what’s been demanded by those seeking justice for the victims of Hillsborough—may end up being largely symbolic, with that final decision falling to the independent Hillsborough panel established two years ago. It certainly won’t mean the full release of all documents within a matter of hours, even with further recent revelations that the Prime Minister’s Office has now also thrown its weight behind a full, uncensored release of everything on file. But it will be a massive, meaningful step on the road to that happening, one that would make backing away from any such action quite nearly impossible and a debate that by being triggered in the first place appears to have itself spurred movement in other quarters.

That debate is scheduled to begin between 5:30 and 6PM in the UK—or between 1:30 and 2PM Eastern Standard for those around the globe more comfortable converting to their home timezone from there. Those in the UK not near a television can watch the debate live on BBC Parliament, and those outside of the UK can view a lower quality stream via BBC’s Democracy Live.


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  • Latortillablanca

    full disclosure, i didn't have the full picture of hillsborough until readin that burnham piece. i knew a bunch of people died in a crazy stadium collapse/stampede, but didn't realize it was that shady... two things: what's the de-classification period in the UK? is there such a law?  In the US im pretty sure its 25 years officially, but obviously if something is classified beyond a certain level it doesn't apply... seems crazy that something so public could classified for so long...

    the other thing is, for all the B/S we have to put up with in this internet age (lack of privacy, identity theft, etc), its kinda comforting to know nothing like hillsborough could happen nowadays and be completed whitewashed - ppl just whip out their iphones and bam! worldwide coverage.

    rly sad, sorry to anyone here that's got a family connection to the 96 - reds fans the world over got your back on this one.

  • McrRed

    Alison McGovern's House of Commons speech (transcript):

    https://docs.google.com/docume...

  • Lis

    Some of the speeches at the debate made me so emotional. 
    Finally the families are getting closer to knowing the truth and the actions of the police, the authorities and the S*n are being exposed to everybody. I hope that this gets as much coverage as it can, including in other countries, the misconceptions have to be eradicated.I also liked the fact that some of the prominent people I usually strongly dislike showed their support, like Piers Morgan, Rio Ferdinand and especially Joey Barton.

  • McrRed

    In fairness to the (previously) odious Keys & Gray (Talk Sport presenters in the uk) and particularly Keys they have done a fantastic job in covering the back story around this tragedy and the shameful cover-up that followed.

  • Lis

    Ah yes, of course.

  • airamanna

    "...it’s been a nervous day of remembrance and retrospect for many just as much as one of cautious hope for the future."

    This. A million times this.

    The secrecy surrounding the police and government's actions has been part of the narrative of Hillsborough for so long, I don't even know how to process the hope that we might finally know exactly what happened. Or, more to the point, that our suspicions about what happened might finally be confirmed. If I am this emotional an ocean away, I cannot imagine what this must mean to the people of Liverpool and the families that have waited so long for justice. 

  • Geza27

    About time really...
    I am hoping as well that these news will get a bit of international coverage and hopefully raise awareness among global football fans that the Hillsborough tragedy has nothing to do with hooliganism... I can't beleive how widespread that misconception is (the other day I read again an article in the leading Swiss newspaper about hooligans, with a direct reference to Hillsborough in the 1st paragraph...).

  • ejbauer11

    Nothing to add that hasn't been said a thousand times. There's a special place in hell for the persons of authority and reporters that lied about the events of that day. YNWA.

  • redtrev73

    Agreed Edward. Long may the duplicitous bastards in authority at the time burn in that hell for their evil self-preservation, cowardice and deception. Hopefully now is the beginning of some real Justice for the 96. Staggering that it has taken so long for even an honest discussion and that people have cared so little.

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