- Associated Press - Saturday, April 12, 2014

LONDON (AP) - Near the Wembley field, 96 seats remained empty on Saturday. Just a Liverpool scarf draped over each of them as a tribute to the 96 Liverpool fans who went to an FA Cup semifinal 25 years ago but never returned home.

The 1989 Liverpool-Nottingham Forest match lasted just six minutes before being halted at Hillsborough when the magnitude of the deadly crush became apparent. A quarter of a century later, matches on Saturday - from the Arsenal-Wigan semifinal at Wembley Stadium to grounds across England - started at seven minutes past the hour.

The Hillsborough disaster changed the face of English soccer, and the treatment of the grieving families by authorities remains a scar that is yet to be fully healed.

Amid commemorations for Tuesday’s 25th anniversary, families are in court in a bid to get the deaths officially described as unlawful killings. The original accidental death verdicts were overturned by the High Court in London in 2012 after documents uncovered a cover-up by police.

“I have been privileged to meet with some of the families in recent months,” Football Association chairman Greg Dyke wrote in Saturday’s Wembley program. “And I am in awe of their courage and resilience.”

The victims were finally officially exonerated of wrongdoing in 2012 after the release of previously secret documents. It took until then for the FA to also apologize for staging one of its showpiece events at a ground without a valid safety certificate and with previous crowd-safety issues.

The disaster led to the introduction of all-seater stadiums that made matches in England among the safest in the world. The deadly crush at Sheffield Wednesday’s ground unfolded after police officers moved 2,000 Liverpool fans into standing-only, caged-in enclosures that were already full.

Authorities sought to place the blame on the victims by characterizing the disaster as a result of hooliganism, but the 2012 documents uncovered a sophisticated attempt by police to blame innocent supporters by instructing officers to change statements and insinuate that many fans were drunk and had histories of violence or criminality.

“To have to be fighting for 25 years for that has been one hell of a journey,” said Margaret Aspinall, chairman of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, who lost her son James in the tragedy. “This city needs closure … and that is hopefully to get what is right, proper and just and what we should have had 25 years ago, and then everyone hopefully can move on.”

There will be tributes at Anfield when Liverpool hosts Manchester City on Sunday, a poignant occasion for the club and an important game for a team nearing its first English championship since 1990.

After a memorial service at Anfield on the anniversary on Tuesday, the families’ focus will return to the courtroom near Liverpool in Warrington where the new inquests into the 96 deaths are being heard by a jury.

“We still have got a long way to go,” Aspinall said. “We’ve had no accountability and no one knows what is going to happen through these inquests. But we feel it is time, especially with it being the 25th anniversary, to be united.”

At Wembley, soon after a minute’s silence began, some Arsenal fans began chanting “Justice for the 96.”

“We are a lot closer to that now than we were 25 years ago,” Kenny Dalglish, who was Liverpool manager at Hillsborough, said ahead of the anniversary. “It was a horrendous experience and something that should have never happened.”

___

Rob Harris can be followed at www.twitter.com/RobHarris

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide