Skip to content

Hillsborough: Jury ruling brings 'total vindication' to victims says Kenny Dalglish

Kenny Dalglish: The former Liverpool manager wore a '96' lapel badge while giving evidence.
Image: Kenny Dalglish believes the fans have been vindicated after 27 traumatic years

Former Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish believes an inquests jury ruling that the 96 victims who died in the Hillsborough disaster had been unlawfully killed serves as total vindication for the relatives and supporters of the club following a 27-year battle for the truth.

The deaths were ruled accidental at the end of the original 1991 inquest.

96 'unlawfully killed'
96 'unlawfully killed'

he 96 football fans who died in the Hillsborough disaster were unlawfully killed,

But those verdicts were quashed following the 2012 Hillsborough Independent Panel report, which concluded that a major cover-up had taken place in an effort by police and others to avoid the blame for what happened.

The new jury concluded on Tuesday that blunders by the police and ambulance service on the day had "caused or contributed" to the disaster and that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

Dalglish told BBC Radio: "The fans have been totally vindicated, and the families have been victorious in everything they put forwards. The truth they knew 27 years ago has just come to pass now.

"They fought for the person who went to a football match and lost their life. You cannot summarise or even to begin to guess what those families have been through for 27 years. There were times when things looked bleak and they stayed totally true to their loved-ones.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

A service at St George's Hall pays tribute to the 96 that lost their lives 27 years ago

"They have been humble, had integrity and gone about getting what they knew to be the truth - it has taken them 27 years to do it, so you just feel so relieved for them."

Also See:

The former Scotland international spent time with supporters as Anfield was opened up for the paying of respects in the days following the disaster, and also attended many funerals.

He added: "The fans who survived... what did they have in their mind? That maybe people thought that they were the ones who caused the death of the people who were feral Liverpool fans, and for them to have to live with that for 27 years must be soul-destroying for them.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Liverpool chief executive Ian Ayre says the club will continue to support the families of those who lost loved ones at Hillsborough

"Other members of the families and friends who attended that match and were fortunate enough to come back, they have been totally vindicated, with people looking towards them and having thought 'Maybe they were to blame?'  or if they had that guilt in their mind, thinking 'Maybe we could have done something more to help?'

"With people accusing them of being drunk and the rest of it, well they have been totally and utterly vindicated.

"The people who were at the game, doing their utmost to save people's lives on the pitch, were telling the truth.. that is something which was known widely on Merseyside to be the case.

Vigil for Hillsborough victims
Vigil for Hillsborough victims

Hillsborough victims to be remembered in vigil

"For everyone involved with Liverpool, this is a fantastic outcome, but it is horrendous that it has taken 27 years for this to come through."

Around Sky