Coventry Telegraph

Palin’s life on screen

- Manchester Arena

MICHAEL Palin’s life and career are to be celebrated in a BBC television special. The BAFTA said the hourlong Michael Palin: A Life On Screen will be broadcast on BBC2 in the new year. RELATIVES of the Manchester bomber’s victims have said they do not blame the security services after an official report found the attacker had been on MI5’s radar.

Salman Abedi had once been a “subject of interest” for counter-terror officers, who had not yet held a scheduled meeting to discuss the 22-year-old when he detonated his suicide bomb at Manchester Arena.

A review found that counter-terrorism police and MI5 could have succeeded in stopping Abedi “had the cards fallen differentl­y”.

Olivia Campbell-Hardy, 15, from Bury, was one of 22 people killed in the terror attack which happened after an Ariana Grande concert on May 22.

Steve Goodman, the step-father of Olivia’s father, said: “I have started a charity for her, Liv’s Trust, the motto is, ‘We choose love.’ I will not call anybody for doing their jobs or doing their best.

“The police were doing their jobs as best they could. Unfortunat­ely informatio­n is not always reliable. They have to think before they act and unfortunat­ely it turned out too late.”

Asked about the report finding Abedi might have been stopped “had the cards fallen differentl­y” and a meeting scheduled to discuss intelligen­ce on him held sooner, Mr Goodman said: “It probably means, my interpreta­tion is, if they had decided to have the meeting earlier they might have caught him.

“But meetings are put on schedules... I don’t hold any malice to them.”

Dan Hett, whose 29-year-old PR manager brother Martyn Hett was killed in the blast, said the review’s findings were being unfairly portrayed as “mistakes”.

In a series of tweets, Mr Hett said: “Unsure where I stand on this. This was a f ***** g hard story to read, make no mistake, but people are painting these decisions as straight-up mistakes, and that feels like an over-simplifica­tion.

“’Had the cards fallen differentl­y’ – hard as it is to imagine this falling differentl­y, I can’t fathom how complicate­d modern antiterror­ism intelligen­ce is. Hindsight is an easy thing to fall back on.

“The headlines paint a fairly slanted assessment that, at a glance, implies mistakes, and this definitely doesn’t sit okay. as usual, outraged armchair experts come out of the woodwork to criticise.

“Tellingly, the positive aspects (I know, I know) around successful work are only footnotes in most articles about this. This isn’t black and white, none of this is, ever.

“And, of course, the commentary that will pop out from our gutter press and the usual unqualifie­d twitter gobs **** s (you know who you are) will distort this further still. Don’t be suckered in.

“The cards didn’t fall differentl­y, for more reasons than any of us could possibly fathom. Use hindsight if it can improve the future, but assigning blame is a mug’s game. Out.”

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