Yorkshire Post

Stephen’s father: I forgive killers

Family ‘is suffering a life sentence’

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

CRIME: The father of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence has said he forgives his son’s killers, nearly 25 years after losing his first child.

Neville Lawrence, 76, said the decision was “the hardest I will ever make in my lifetime”, and that he struggles to put into words the devastatio­n his family has suffered.

THE FATHER of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence has said he forgives his son’s killers, nearly 25 years after losing his first child.

Neville Lawrence, 76, said the decision was “the hardest I will ever make in my lifetime”, and that he struggles to put into words the devastatio­n his family has suffered since his son was killed.

Stephen was murdered by a gang in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22, 1993, at the age of 18.

His father said: “The fact that I had to lose my first child has been devastatin­g. I can’t begin to explain the pain and the anguish me and my family have suffered over the past 25 years.”

He said he had embraced Christian faith since his son’s death and that he plans to spend the 25th anniversar­y of his murder in church.

Two of the group of up to six thugs who attacked the teenager and his friend Duwayne Brooks have been convicted of murder, but the rest have evaded justice. David Norris and Gary Dobson are both serving life sentences.

A key moment for the grieving Mr Lawrence and his ex-wife Doreen was when they met Nelson Mandela two weeks after Stephen died.

“When I met him for the first time I was so inspired by his persona and the way he talked to people,” Mr Lawrence said.

“He made it clear to us that in his country it was something that they go through every day, but never in his wildest dreams did he think that something like that would happen in a place like Britain. Meeting him gave me the courage to do some of the things I have done over the years.

“Other families came to my rescue as well. When you are going to go on a journey, if somebody else who has been through it comes and talks to you they can give you an idea what you’re going to face down the road.

“What those families did for me I can’t even start to explain to people. I decided, after a certain amount of time, on my journey, that if anybody who had the same kind of experience wanted me to come and talk to them then I would do that.

“I also decided that I would go into schools and universiti­es and talk to the younger generation.”

A surge in violent crime has led to nearly 60 murders in London so far this year and Mr Lawrence believes that if young people are left with nothing to do they will get involved in activities that are “devastatin­g” to the community in which they live.

“Right now with the violence, and the knife crime violence, it is even more urgent now that I talk to these youngsters and explain to them the pain and the suffering they inflict on families,” he said.

Mr Lawrence and his former wife, who is now Baroness Lawrence, have campaigned for more than two decades to get justice for their son.

The botched initial investigat­ion into Stephen’s death led to a major public inquiry and eventually a change in the law to allow Dobson to be tried twice for murder.

Detectives have admitted their investigat­ion is unlikely to progress any further without new informatio­n. But the case remains under scrutiny with an inquiry into undercover policing examining claims that police moles infiltrate­d campaign groups supporting the Lawrence family.

The father of three and his family will never escape the pain of what happened.

Mr Lawrence, a former plasterer and decorator said: “My family, especially me, I will never be the person I was before Stephen’s death.

“Maybe sometimes people think you can just brush things aside. You can never brush this aside, this is going to live with you for the rest of your life.

“This is a life sentence that you can’t finish. The only time my life sentence will be finished is when I’m in the ground.”

I can’t begin to explain the pain me and my family have suffered. Neville Lawrence, father of murdered 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence.

 ?? PICTURES: PA WIRE. ?? DEVASTATIO­N: Neville Lawrence has issued a message of forgivenes­s to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the gang murder of his 18-year-old son, Stephen, in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22, 1993.
PICTURES: PA WIRE. DEVASTATIO­N: Neville Lawrence has issued a message of forgivenes­s to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the gang murder of his 18-year-old son, Stephen, in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22, 1993.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom