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Police cover-up their incompetencies

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
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If this can happen in UK, this can also happen (or has already happened many times) in Singapore.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012
PM apologises for Hillsborough injustice

ESPN staff


Prime Minister David Cameron has apologised to the families of the Hillsborough victims, saying: "What happened that day, and since, was wrong".[TABLE="align: right"]
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Cameron, delivering a statement to the Commons after the publication of a report by the Hillsborough Independent Panel, said police and emergency services made "strenuous attempts'' to deflect the blame for Britain's worst-ever sporting disaster, in which 96 people died, onto fans. He said there had been a "failure of the state" to protect the relatives' loved ones.

"The new evidence that we're presented with today makes clear, in my view, that these families have suffered a double injustice: the injustice of the appalling events, the failure of the state to protect their loved ones and the indefensible wait to get the truth, and then the injustice of the denigration of the deceased - that they were somehow at fault for their own deaths," he told MPs. "

With the weight of the new evidence in this report, it is right for me today as prime minister to make a proper apology to the families of the 96 for all they have suffered over the past 23 years.

"So on behalf of the government, and indeed our country, I am profoundly sorry that this double injustice has been left uncorrected for so long."

A Liverpool FC statement said: "After 23 long and painful years, our fans have finally been fully exonerated of all blame. Today, the world knows what we have always known - that Liverpool fans were not just innocent on that terrible day but that there was also reprehensible and hurtful misrepresentation of the truth."

The panel that compiled the report, which was chaired by the Right Reverend James Jones, the Bishop of Liverpool, assessed more than 400,000 pages of documents relating to the 1989 FA Cup semi-final disaster. The report's findings were made available to relatives from 8am on Wednesday.
Cameron said the document revealed that 164 police statements had been "significantly amended", with comments attacking the conduct of officers removed from 116 of those. For the first time, it disclosed that South Yorkshire Ambulance Service documents had been "subject to the same process''.

The report said that, at a Police Federation meeting, South Yorkshire Police had been advised to prepare a "defence" and a "rock-solid story" and told that "drunken ticketless individuals" should be blamed for what had happened.

Cameron said the report showed that police had carried out checks on victims in an attempt to "impune their reputations", adding that the then government, led by Margaret Thatcher, should have done more to challenge the falsehoods being spread about the Liverpool fans.

However, he insisted there was no evidence that the government had attempted to conceal the truth.

Describing the report's findings as "deeply troubling", he said it was "black and white" in proving that Liverpool fans had not been responsible for the disaster and that there had been a concerted attempt by police to divert the blame.

The PM told the Commons that newspapers - most infamously the Sun - had reported false allegations about the behaviour of supporters.

The report showed that briefings to the media, which led to the Sun's story, had used information from a Sheffield news agency that reported comments made by police officers. Kelvin Mackenzie, the editor responsible for headlining that story 'The Truth', issued an apology after the panel's report was published.

MPs were told that some of those who died on the terraces at the Leppings Lane end of Sheffield Wednesday's ground had suffered reversible asphyxia and could have been saved, but the report showed there had been serious shortcomings in the response of the emergency services.
Neither Lord Justice Taylor, in his report soon after the disaster, nor the coroner at the original inquest, had looked properly at the response of the other emergency services, the Commons heard.
The report found that the ambulance service failed to implement its major incident plan fully and that there had been "a delay from the emergency services when people were being crushed and killed''.
Cameron said the original inquest into the deaths - which said all the victims had died by 3.15pm, 15 minutes after the match had kicked off - was inadequate. The report called the original pathologists' evidence of a single, unvarying pattern of death "unsustainable''.
The attorney general, Dominic Grieve, must now decide whether to apply to the High Court to overturn the verdict of that inquest and order another one.
The report also said the risks at Hillsborough were known, and that there had been dangerous situations in the stadium in 1981, 1987 and 1988 and the safety of the crowd in 1989 had been "compromised at every level".
"Not enough people in this country understand what the people of Merseyside have been through," Cameron said. "This appalling death toll of so many loved ones lost was compounded by an attempt to blame the victims."
The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, said it "shamed the country" that it had taken 23 years for the truth about what happened that day to emerge and called on Cameron to ensure that Grieve acted with urgency.
Miliband said there had been "terrible mistakes and negligence in policing", and added: "There was a systematic attempt by some in the police to cover this up after the event and, disgracefully, to spread the blame to the fans. They were aided and abetted by parts of the media."
He said it was "clear that the original inquest was hopelessly inadequate" and asked whether those responsible for the conduct of police at the time could be held accountable.
Steve Roterham, the MP for Liverpool Walton, said the families of the 96 "finally have the undeniable truth", while Sheila Coleman, of the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, said: "We have had the truth - now it is time for justice.
"Clearly, people indulged in criminal activities by changing and altering statements and telling lies. If you or I did that, we would be prosecuted - people cannot be above the law. The law-makers and those who are supposed to uphold the law shouldn't be above the law."
 
And the newspaper also sided with the police and helped to cover-up. Sounds familiar?

Wednesday, September 12, 2012
The Sun admits 'terrible mistake'

ESPN staff


The findings of the Hillsborough Independent Panel have led the Sun newspaper to apologise for its coverage of the tragedy that claimed the lives of 96 Liverpool fans in 1989. [TABLE="align: right"]
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Prime Minister David Cameron revealed on Wednesday that findings from the independent review into the tragedy at the Sheffield ground - as it hosted an FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest - showed the safety of the crowd was compromised on "every level".
Cameron revealed that police officers had subsequently tampered with evidence and eye-witness accounts in a bid to deflect blame for the deaths onto the fans, evidence that The Sun relayed in an infamous article entitled 'The Truth' - which blamed Liverpool fans for the disaster.
The Prime Minister stated that the article was "clearly wrong and caused huge offence, distress and hurt", before outlining the extent of the police cover-up.
"[The] report finds that 164 statements were significantly amended - and 116 explicitly removed negative comments about the policing operation - including its lack of leadership," he added. "The report also makes important findings about particular actions taken by the police and coroner while investigating the deaths.
"There is new evidence which shows that police officers carried out police national computer checks on those who had died in an attempt - and I quote from the report - 'to impugn the reputations of the deceased'."
Liverpool fans have long boycotted The Sun as a result of their coverage of the Hillsborough tragedy. After Wednesday's findings, the newspaper - owned by Rupert Murdoch's News International - belatedly issued a full apology.
"Twenty-three years ago the Sun newspaper made a terrible mistake," current editor Dominic Moynihan said. "We published an inaccurate and offensive story about the events at Hillsborough. We said it was the truth - it wasn't.
"The Hillsborough Independent Panel has now established what really happened that day. It's an appalling story and at the heart of it are the police's attempts to smear Liverpool fans. It's a version of events that 23 years ago The Sun went along with and for that we're deeply ashamed and profoundly sorry.
"We will also reflect our deep sense of shame."
The editor of the newspaper at the time the article was published, Kelvin Mackenzie, offered his "profuse apologies to the people of Liverpool for that headline".
He added: "It has taken more than two decades, 400,000 documents and a two-year inquiry to discover to my horror that it would have far more accurate had I written the headline 'The Lies' rather than 'The Truth'. I published in good faith and I am sorry that it was so wrong."
South Yorkshire chief constable David Crompton also said he was "profoundly sorry" for the conduct of the force during the disaster and in its aftermath - promising those who doctored statements and the like will face punishment.
"I think that if people [police officers] are shown to have acted criminally then they should face prosecution," Crompton said. "In the immediate aftermath senior officers sought to change the record of events. Disgraceful lies were told which blamed the Liverpool fans for the disaster.
"I am profoundly sorry for the way the force failed on 15th April 1989 and I am doubly sorry for the injustice that followed and I apologise to the families of the 96 and Liverpool fans."
In a statement, Liverpool chose to pay tribute to those who have campaigned tirelessly for the truth surrounding the Hillsborough Disaster to finally be published.
"Over the last 23 years the families who lost loved ones and the survivors of this terrible tragedy have shown immense dignity and resilience in their tireless campaign for justice," the statement read.
"Liverpool Football Club commends the Hillsborough Independent Panel report which acknowledges the avoidable catastrophic failures before, during and after the disaster. The club also welcomes the Prime Minister's apology to the families and survivors on behalf of the Government and await the Attorney General's pending review of the report. After 23 long and painful years, our fans have finally been fully exonerated of all blame.
"The world knows what we have always known, that Liverpool fans were not just innocent on that terrible day but that there was reprehensible and hurtful misrepresentation of the truth."
 
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