Hillsborough
Page 2 of 19 • Share •
Page 2 of 19 •
1, 2, 3 ... 10 ... 19 
Re: Hillsborough
Cheers, still haven't got email.
Ridiculas that this has to be done
Ridiculas that this has to be done
_________________
God invented Beer to stop the Irish taking over the World!!!
IRISHANFIELD CHAMPION 2011-2012
"60% of the time, it works every time"
I never knew I was such a big deal


Dallas- TOP DOG!!
- Posts: 6002
Join date: 2011-08-08
Location: Athlone...Middle of nowhere..Centre v Everywhere!!!
Re: Hillsborough
Only 14,000 sigs
Needs 100,000 to be heard in parliment!
Get signing folks
There are ways of getting a UK address, cough cough
Needs 100,000 to be heard in parliment!
Get signing folks
There are ways of getting a UK address, cough cough
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
misslfc wrote:Check your spam mail Thomas
Still nothing, ill do again after work
_________________
God invented Beer to stop the Irish taking over the World!!!
IRISHANFIELD CHAMPION 2011-2012
"60% of the time, it works every time"
I never knew I was such a big deal


Dallas- TOP DOG!!
- Posts: 6002
Join date: 2011-08-08
Location: Athlone...Middle of nowhere..Centre v Everywhere!!!
Re: Hillsborough
http://www.anfieldroad.com/news/201108184880/what-are-they-hiding-time-for-some-truth.html/
What are they hiding?
What are they hiding?
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
http://www.lfconline.com/news/tmnw/dalglish_talks_about_hillsborough_investigation_video_695120/index.shtml
Kenny speakes about the campaign to release documents
Kenny speakes about the campaign to release documents
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
Barton just got Piers Morgan to sign it, has also asked Sugar, interesting to see his response
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
read this muppets timeline https://twitter.com/?lang=en&logged_out=1#!/DavidMullan1
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
I used my other email address, confirmed there now
_________________
God invented Beer to stop the Irish taking over the World!!!
IRISHANFIELD CHAMPION 2011-2012
"60% of the time, it works every time"
I never knew I was such a big deal


Dallas- TOP DOG!!
- Posts: 6002
Join date: 2011-08-08
Location: Athlone...Middle of nowhere..Centre v Everywhere!!!
Re: Hillsborough
Fair play
http://twitpic.com/68zxpn
http://twitpic.com/68zxpn
misslfc- Fab at 40!!!!!!
- Posts: 8360
Join date: 2011-08-10
Re: Hillsborough
Over 63000 sign petition
_________________
God invented Beer to stop the Irish taking over the World!!!
IRISHANFIELD CHAMPION 2011-2012
"60% of the time, it works every time"
I never knew I was such a big deal


Dallas- TOP DOG!!
- Posts: 6002
Join date: 2011-08-08
Location: Athlone...Middle of nowhere..Centre v Everywhere!!!
Re: Hillsborough
Two decades on from Hillsborough and Liverpool is still in the dark
On 15 April 1989, 96 people died at Hillsborough. Photograph: Rex Features
Slide out of a taxi at Anfield and a figure will hand you a "Don't buy the Sun" leaflet while a familiar throng chats outside the Hillsborough Justice Campaign shop on Walton Breck Road. The disaster that cost 96 lives 22 years ago is so integral to the experience of attending a Liverpool match that the quest for the truth is part of the identity of the club.
The campaign was always there and always will be, or so it feels, as the chip shops do their lively trade and fans gather at the Hillsborough memorial or examine Bill Shankly's statue ("He made the people happy"). But the people can't be happy – not fully – until the system extends to the families of the dead the simple right to see all of the documents relating to events in Sheffield on 15 April 1989, when Steven Gerrard's 10-year-old cousin, Jon-Paul Gilhooley, was the youngest of the 96 who went to a football match and never came back.
There is no let-up in the antipathy to the Sun over its coverage of the tragedy. Kelvin MacKenzie, the paper's editor at the time, was on Newsnight recently, pontificating about rioters. His inability to distinguish 22 years ago between a disaster and a so-called outbreak of criminality as people lay dying on the Hillsborough pitch would, in a more discerning society, disqualify him from comment on the recent disorder across Britain. But the current Sun continues to carry the stigma of those times on Merseyside, just as the families persist with their demand for full disclosure.
The story so far is that an e-petition calling for previously hidden documents on Hillsborough to be released raced past 50,000 signatures this week and looks sure to acquire the 100,000 names needed to force the House of Commons backbench business committee to consider granting it time for debate.
On Wednesday, the Cabinet Office said it would appeal against a ruling by Christopher Graham, the Information Commissioner, who had approved a freedom of information request from the BBC to see the papers. The e-petition took off after Kenny Dalglish, the Liverpool manager, tweeted: "Think it is very important that we support this." Since that moment, Joey Barton has interrupted his flow of Friedrich Nietzsche quotations to urge his 428,000 followers to sign online.
The Commissioner argued that it would assist public understanding of the tragedy for the concealed documents to be released. But, in a statement, the government said: "The Cabinet Office absolutely agrees with the principle of providing information to families about the Hillsborough stadium disaster, but we believe it is important any release of information should be managed through the panel's processes and in line with their terms of reference."
The panel referred to is the independent body set up by the previous Labour government to examine the archive and decide on publication. But the panel was not in existence in 2009 when the request for access was first made. The BBC says the records include "reports presented to Margaret Thatcher [the then prime minister], correspondence between her office and that of the home secretary, Douglas Hurd, and minutes of meetings she attended."
For the neutral to find a position on this procedural wrangling, one has only to imagine how it must feel for the mother or father of a victim to be told, 22 years after the event, that they are not entitled to see words on pieces of paper that might release them from the torment of not knowing the full story of the defining day of their lives.
Across Merseyside, people wake and go back to sleep with a sense of injustice that stems partly from the original coroner's inquest, which imposed a cut-off for the examination of evidence at 3.15pm, a source of anger, still, to those who believe the role of the emergency services and the full timescale of death should have been part of Dr Stefan Popper's report.
In March, the Hillsborough panel said they would look at previously concealed documents. But you can see why the families object to the idea that a panel must decide what they can and cannot see. The system has piled years and years of additional needless cruelty on the Hillsborough families. The British obsession with secrecy and protection for those in power has stretched beyond all humane grounds the process of finding out, once and for all, what happened (and who was responsible) at an FA Cup semi-final in Sheffield more than two decades ago.
To most of us, the obvious truth is that this pain and indignation will hang over Liverpool until the books are laid out. This shame-inducing suppression of evidence serves no moral purpose. Nor can the campaign be fobbed off, as every politician must know by now. Its spirit pervades every aspect of Liverpool football club, to the point where Rafa BenÃtez's last act as manager was to donate £96,000 to the campaign.
The first e-petition to force a parliamentary debate called for convicted rioters to be deprived of state benefits. The state moves fast when it wants to punish and slowly when people want the truth.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2011/aug/20/hillsborough-disaster-liverpool
On 15 April 1989, 96 people died at Hillsborough. Photograph: Rex Features
Slide out of a taxi at Anfield and a figure will hand you a "Don't buy the Sun" leaflet while a familiar throng chats outside the Hillsborough Justice Campaign shop on Walton Breck Road. The disaster that cost 96 lives 22 years ago is so integral to the experience of attending a Liverpool match that the quest for the truth is part of the identity of the club.
The campaign was always there and always will be, or so it feels, as the chip shops do their lively trade and fans gather at the Hillsborough memorial or examine Bill Shankly's statue ("He made the people happy"). But the people can't be happy – not fully – until the system extends to the families of the dead the simple right to see all of the documents relating to events in Sheffield on 15 April 1989, when Steven Gerrard's 10-year-old cousin, Jon-Paul Gilhooley, was the youngest of the 96 who went to a football match and never came back.
There is no let-up in the antipathy to the Sun over its coverage of the tragedy. Kelvin MacKenzie, the paper's editor at the time, was on Newsnight recently, pontificating about rioters. His inability to distinguish 22 years ago between a disaster and a so-called outbreak of criminality as people lay dying on the Hillsborough pitch would, in a more discerning society, disqualify him from comment on the recent disorder across Britain. But the current Sun continues to carry the stigma of those times on Merseyside, just as the families persist with their demand for full disclosure.
The story so far is that an e-petition calling for previously hidden documents on Hillsborough to be released raced past 50,000 signatures this week and looks sure to acquire the 100,000 names needed to force the House of Commons backbench business committee to consider granting it time for debate.
On Wednesday, the Cabinet Office said it would appeal against a ruling by Christopher Graham, the Information Commissioner, who had approved a freedom of information request from the BBC to see the papers. The e-petition took off after Kenny Dalglish, the Liverpool manager, tweeted: "Think it is very important that we support this." Since that moment, Joey Barton has interrupted his flow of Friedrich Nietzsche quotations to urge his 428,000 followers to sign online.
The Commissioner argued that it would assist public understanding of the tragedy for the concealed documents to be released. But, in a statement, the government said: "The Cabinet Office absolutely agrees with the principle of providing information to families about the Hillsborough stadium disaster, but we believe it is important any release of information should be managed through the panel's processes and in line with their terms of reference."
The panel referred to is the independent body set up by the previous Labour government to examine the archive and decide on publication. But the panel was not in existence in 2009 when the request for access was first made. The BBC says the records include "reports presented to Margaret Thatcher [the then prime minister], correspondence between her office and that of the home secretary, Douglas Hurd, and minutes of meetings she attended."
For the neutral to find a position on this procedural wrangling, one has only to imagine how it must feel for the mother or father of a victim to be told, 22 years after the event, that they are not entitled to see words on pieces of paper that might release them from the torment of not knowing the full story of the defining day of their lives.
Across Merseyside, people wake and go back to sleep with a sense of injustice that stems partly from the original coroner's inquest, which imposed a cut-off for the examination of evidence at 3.15pm, a source of anger, still, to those who believe the role of the emergency services and the full timescale of death should have been part of Dr Stefan Popper's report.
In March, the Hillsborough panel said they would look at previously concealed documents. But you can see why the families object to the idea that a panel must decide what they can and cannot see. The system has piled years and years of additional needless cruelty on the Hillsborough families. The British obsession with secrecy and protection for those in power has stretched beyond all humane grounds the process of finding out, once and for all, what happened (and who was responsible) at an FA Cup semi-final in Sheffield more than two decades ago.
To most of us, the obvious truth is that this pain and indignation will hang over Liverpool until the books are laid out. This shame-inducing suppression of evidence serves no moral purpose. Nor can the campaign be fobbed off, as every politician must know by now. Its spirit pervades every aspect of Liverpool football club, to the point where Rafa BenÃtez's last act as manager was to donate £96,000 to the campaign.
The first e-petition to force a parliamentary debate called for convicted rioters to be deprived of state benefits. The state moves fast when it wants to punish and slowly when people want the truth.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2011/aug/20/hillsborough-disaster-liverpool
Re: Hillsborough
81500 have signed.
_________________
God invented Beer to stop the Irish taking over the World!!!
IRISHANFIELD CHAMPION 2011-2012
"60% of the time, it works every time"
I never knew I was such a big deal


Dallas- TOP DOG!!
- Posts: 6002
Join date: 2011-08-08
Location: Athlone...Middle of nowhere..Centre v Everywhere!!!
Re: Hillsborough
100,011 

Bosco- On The Bench

- Posts: 600
Join date: 2011-08-12
Age: 20
Location: Walkinstown,Dublin
Page 2 of 19 •
1, 2, 3 ... 10 ... 19 
Similar topics» Alex Beam depicts Hillsborough as a "riot"
» Hillsborough disaster! ...
» Liverpool FC denies profiteering from Hillsborough shirt
» For the sake of Hillsborough tomorrow vote Labour, Vote Labour. Dont let the tories back or they will stop it.
» Thatcher’s Hillsborough files must be released
» Hillsborough disaster! ...
» Liverpool FC denies profiteering from Hillsborough shirt
» For the sake of Hillsborough tomorrow vote Labour, Vote Labour. Dont let the tories back or they will stop it.
» Thatcher’s Hillsborough files must be released
Page 2 of 19
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum