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Hillsborough: What happened
Liverpool F.C. were involved in their 17th FA Cup Semi-Final, to
be played against Nottingham Forest F.C. at Hillsborough, the home
of Sheffield Wednesday F.C.
At the time most stadiums had placed high chainlink fencing
between the spectators and the pitch, in response to hooliganism
which had plagued the sport for years. Hooliganism was a
particularly strong influence in the United Kingdom, where it
often involved pitch invasions and the throwing of a variety of
missiles. This fencing was later identified as one of the main
factors leading to the disaster. The part of the stadium where the
problem occurred was also a "terrace" area, a cheaper standing
section without seats that was determined to be a major
contributing factor to the disaster. Terraces were frequently
divided by further chainlink fencing into sections called pens to
aid crowd control.
The Hillsborough Stadium was segregated between the opposing fans
as was customary at all large games at neutral venues: the
Liverpool supporters being assigned to the Leppings Lane End. Kick
off was scheduled for 3.00pm but due to a variety of factors
including traffic delays on the route to Sheffield from Liverpool
many of the Liverpool supporters were later than usual arriving.
Between 2.00pm and 2.45pm there was a considerable build up of
fans in the small area outside the turnstiles at the Leppings Lane
End, all eager to enter the stadium before the match started.
A bottleneck developed with more fans arriving than entering the
stadium. With an estimated 5,000 fans trying to get through the
turnstiles and an increasingly dangerous situation, the police
decided to open a second set of gates which did not have
turnstiles (Gate C). The resulting inpouring of hundreds, or
possibly thousands, of fans through a narrow tunnel at the rear of
the terrace and into the already overcrowded central two pens
caused a crush at the front where people were pressed against the
fencing.
The people entering were unaware of the problems being experienced
at the fence and for some time the problem was not noticed by
anybody (other than those affected), it was not until 3:06pm that
the referee stopped the game. By this time a small gate in the
fencing had been opened and some fans escaped the crush by this
route — others climbed over the fencing, and further fans were
pulled up by fellow fans into the upper tier above the Leppings
Lane terrace.
The pitch quickly started to fill with people sweating and gasping
for breath, those with crush injuries, and with the bodies of the
dead. The police and ambulance services were overwhelmed by the
scale of the disaster and fans helped as best they could, many
attempting CPR and some tearing down advertising hoardings to act
as makeshift stretchers.
The crush ultimately took the lives of 96 people, with 766 fans
receiving injuries.
Graphic footage of the disaster was available because the match
was being broadcast and this, along with the number of fatalities
made an extreme impact on the general UK population.
A permanent tribute to those who lost their lives can be found
alongside the Shankly Gates at Anfield. A further tribute was set
up in 1999 at Hillsborough.
The Taylor Inquiry
Following the disaster, Lord Taylor of Gosforth was appointed to
conduct an inquiry into the disaster. Taylor's inquiry sat for
thirty-one days and published two reports, one interim report that
laid out the events of the day and immediate conclusions and one
final report that made general recommendations on football ground
safety. As a result of the inquiry, fences in front of fans were
removed and stadia were converted to become all-seated. This
became known as the Taylor Report.
There was considerable debate over some aspects of the disaster;
in particular, attention was focused on the decision to open the
secondary gates. It was suggested that it would have been better
to delay the start of the game as had often been done at other
venues and matches. In defence the police claimed that they were
concerned that the crush outside the stadium was getting out of
control and accusations were made that some Liverpool fans did not
have tickets and were trying to force the turnstiles. Other
accusations of misbehaviour were made in relation to the crowd,
however, no substantial evidence was presented to support these
claims.
The Sun newspaper
On the Wednesday following the disaster, Kelvin MacKenzie, then
editor of The Sun, a British tabloid newspaper owned by Rupert
Murdoch, used the front page headline 'THE TRUTH', with three
sub-headlines: 'Some fans picked pockets of victims'; 'Some fans
urinated on the brave cops'; 'Some fans beat up PC giving kiss of
life'.
The story accompanying these headlines claimed that 'drunken
Liverpool fans viciously attacked rescue workers as they tried to
revive victims' and 'police officers, firemen and ambulance crew
were punched, kicked and urinated upon'. A quote, attributed to an
unnamed policeman, claimed that a dead girl had been abused and
that Liverpool fans 'were openly urinating on us and the bodies of
the dead'.
In their history of The Sun, Peter Chippendale and Chris Horrie
wrote:
'As MacKenzie's layout was seen by more and more people, a
collective shudder ran through the office but MacKenzie's
dominance was so total there was nobody left in the organisation
who could rein him in except Murdoch. [Everyone] seemed paralysed,
"looking like rabbits in the headlights", as one hack described
them. The error staring them in the face was too glaring. It
obviously wasn't a silly mistake; nor was it a simple oversight.
Nobody really had any comment on it—they just took one look and
went away shaking their heads in wonder at the enormity of it. It
was a "classic smear".'
Lord Justice Taylor's official inquiry into the disaster
disparaged The Sun's story and was unequivocal as to the
disaster's cause:
'The real cause of the Hillsborough disaster [was] overcrowding,
the main reason for the disaster was the failure of police
control.'
Following The Sun's report, the newspaper was boycotted by most
newsagents in Liverpool, with many refusing to stock the tabloid
and large numbers of readers cancelling orders and even refusing
to buy from shops which did stock the newspaper.
MacKenzie explained his reporting in 1993. Talking to a House of
Commons National Heritage Select Committee he said "I regret
Hillsborough. It was a fundamental mistake. The mistake was I
believed what an MP said. It was a Tory MP. If he had not said it
and the chief superintendent had not agreed with it, we would not
have gone with it." This explanation was not accepted by families
of Hillsborough victims. Even fifteen years after the Hillsborough
disaster, the circulation of The Sun in Liverpool is still
believed to be only 12,000 copies a day where previously it was
around 200,000.
The Sun itself issued an apology "without reservation" in a full
page opinion piece on 7 July 2004, saying that it had "committed
the most terrible mistake in its history." The Sun was responding
to the intense criticism of Wayne Rooney, a Liverpool-born
football star who then still played in the city (for Everton), who
had sold his life story to the newspaper. Rooney's actions had
incensed Liverpool dwellers still angry at The Sun.
The Sun's
apology was somewhat bullish, saying that the "campaign of hate"
against Rooney was organised in part by the Liverpool Daily Post &
Echo, owned by Trinity Mirror, who also own the Daily Mirror,
arch-rivals of The Sun. Thus the apology actually served to anger
some Liverpudlians further. The Liverpool Echo itself did not
accept the apology, calling it "shabby" and "an attempt, once
again, to exploit the Hillsborough dead."
In fairness to The Sun, it should be noted that some other
newspapers also detailed the same allegations on the same day,
which apparently originated from a source within South Yorkshire
Police attempting to divert blame, but the Sun attracted
particular opprobrium for its use of the huge "THE TRUTH" headline
and its subsequent refusal to issue an apology, something the
other newspapers were quick to do.
(Source: www.lfc4life.com)
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