The Daily Telegraph

The families who thought they had walked alone for 28 years

- Joe Shute

Over the past 28 years the bereaved of Hillsborou­gh have marked each painful hurdle in the battle for justice with an outpouring of emotion.

The decision last year by an inquest jury that 96 Liverpool supporters crushed to death in the 1989 stadium disaster had been unlawfully killed was hailed with fluttering red scarves and families linking arms to sing the city’s famous anthem: “You’ll Never Walk Alone.”

But yesterday as they walked out from Warrington’s Parr Hall into the Cheshire drizzle after hearing the news that six people, including two senior officers, have been charged with criminal offences over the deaths and the alleged ensuing cover-up, the emotions they have worn so visibly over the years were kept tightly in check. “28 years for justice”, said Marcia Willis-stewart, the lead lawyer for 77 of the families at the inquests, to the amassed cameras outside. “Now is the time for accountabi­lity.” Barry Devonside, whose son Christophe­r, 18, was among the 96 killed in the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest, simply pumped a tightly coiled fist as he emerged.

Mr Devonside admitted there were initial cheers among the families inside the building when the charges were read out.

Yet the desire not to prejudice forthcomin­g criminal proceeding­s they have fought most of their lives to bring before the courts remained at the forefront of all their minds.

In a statement delivered outside the hall, Marcia Willis-stewart, a lawyer for a number of families, said accountabi­lity for the tragedy was “key” and “at the heart” of the long campaign. She added: “The families are sensitive to the issue of fairness and due process and nobody wishes to jeopardise this.”

She was flanked by relatives looking sternly ahead. Some embraced while still clutching coffee cups, or permitted themselves the faintest of smiles sheltering under umbrellas outside the red-brick building, which is normally reserved for concerts rather than announceme­nts from the Crown Prosecutio­n Service.

Margaret Aspinall, the chairman of the Hillsborou­gh Family Support Group whose son James died in the disaster and was personally hailed for her work by the Prime Minister in the House of Commons yesterday, spoke for many of the families when she expressed the hope that finally some semblance of peace now lay ahead.

“I think everybody needs that,” she said. “I think we all need peace from Hillsborou­gh but we can never have peace until we’ve got truth, justice, accountabi­lity.”

As ever with the Hillsborou­gh families’ campaign, each step forward is a bitter victory – marked by the absence of those no longer here to see it. Their fight has gone on for so long that it is not just anymore in the memory of the 96 who never came home, but more recently the relatives who have since passed away without knowing the outcome of their campaign.

Trevor Hicks, 71, whose teenage daughters Vicki and Sarah were killed in the stadium, told The Daily Telegraph last night that he had been to a number of funerals recently of parents like him who lost children in the tragedy.

Still, as ever, families are motivated by a fierce sense of justice. And something else now: hope. “We see this as a step forward and I feel now that my glass is two-thirds full,” Mr Hicks said. “This is the real beginning of the end.”

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