Hillsborough disaster cabinet papers to be released
E-petition with more than 125,000 signatures forces government to clarify 
position over whether documents will be made public

By Owen Gibson, sports news correspondent from The Guardian

The government has promised to release all cabinet papers relating to the 
1989 Hillsborough disaster to the public once they have been shared with 
families of the deceased, after being forced to clarify its position by an 
e-petition that has reached more than 125,000 signatures.

The clarification of the government's position, after it opted to appeal 
against a ruling by the information commissioner that the papers should be 
released to the BBC under Freedom of Information legislation, was welcomed 
by the Hillsborough Independent Panel (HIP), set up to examine the full 
circumstances surrounding the disaster in which 96 Liverpool supporters 
died at an FA Cup semi final. It is due to report next spring.

The cabinet papers are seen as potentially significant in revealing the 
approach taken by the Thatcher administration to the disaster. A Cabinet 
Office spokesman said: "The government has confirmed its commitment to 
full transparency about the Hillsborough disaster through full public 
disclosure. All papers had previously been shared with the Hillsborough 
Independent Panel.

"The government is happy for all the papers to be released as soon as the 
panel so decides, in consultation with the families. We expect them to be 
shared with the Hillsborough families first and then to the wider public."

A spokesman for the panel, chaired by the bishop of Liverpool, James 
Jones, and set up by the Labour government in response to longstanding 
calls to uncover the full causes and consequences of the disaster, 
said: "The HIP welcomes the government's commitment to publish all 
relevant documents to the panel.

"The response to the petition shows the strength of public feeling about 
the Hillsborough disaster. The panel is accessing and researching hundreds 
of thousands of documents and other materials relating to the context, 
circumstances and aftermath of the disaster. It is the intention of the 
panel to publish all documents simultaneously."

Margaret Aspinall, chair of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, 
said: "We want full disclosure of all documents, with no redactions, for 
the families, for survivors, who we must not forget suffered greatly at 
Hillsborough, and for supporters. We are humbled that so many people are 
supporting us, and have signed the e-petition.

"But although we are cautious given our experience over 22 years, we do 
trust the panel and maintain that the papers be released to the panel 
first, so they can be put into context, and then shown to the families, 
before then being released to the wider public."

Once the e-petition reached more than 100,000 signatures, encouraged by a 
Twitter campaign by footballers and celebrities, the government was 
obliged to respond and forward it to the backbench business committee for 
consideration for parliamentary debate. 


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