Finished reading ... Hillsborough: The Truth / Phil Scraton ... 13 August 2017
Updated Ed. (Including the new inquest verdicts)
ISBN: 9781910948019
Excellent. Gripping. Grim.
This is the record of the 27 years long search for truth and justice by the families of the 96 people who died as a result of crushing in excessive crowds at an FA Cup semi-final match at Hillsborough on 15 April 1989. These families and their supporters never gave up in the face of police lies and cover-ups, and newspaper lies and smears of the worst kind. In fact, during and after the second inquests, the police had still not given up, still wrongly blaming the football fans for their own deaths.
Could such a disaster and aftermath happen again, in your city or mine? I think, Yes. I look at how poorly road blocks are managed when a fun run takes over my home city. If that's the best that can be managed at a relatively low key event, could the authorities and emergency services really manage a disaster?
And in any such future disaster, would the authorities, the establishment, look to protect themselves by any means possible? I remain pessimistic on that score.
For those reasons alone, this is a must-read book.
One thing was painfully obvious: “the law” is a closed world of its own. It has little to do with truth and justice. The second inquests were a hard won battle following the multiple flaws of the first inquests and a variety of inquiries and reviews.
And one sentence struck me: “ 'Closure' … is an imposed expectation [on the bereaved] for the benefit of others. “ It gives you (or me!) pause for thought.
Bought by my local library at my request.
I put in the purchase request for this book on 04 June 2017.
On 28 June came news that 6 people had been charged over Hillsborough, including the police Match Day Commander who has been charged with the manslaughter by gross negligence of 95 people.