Liverpool News
Former Bishop of Liverpool offers to help shape Hillsborough Law
2 months ago
The Right Reverend James Jones, former Bishop of Liverpool and chair of the Hillsborough Independent Panel, has offered his assistance to the Government in shaping the long-awaited Hillsborough Law.
Hillsborough Law, which would introduce a legal duty of candour for public authorities, was promised in the Kingâs Speech earlier this year by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s Government.
Right Reverend James Jones said:
âWeâre aware of other public inquiries, weâre aware of millions of words being written about various public tragedies and the familiesâ feeling is thereâs got to be more than words, thereâs got to be action and itâs got to lead to change â a change in culture and a change in law.
âSo, the Hillsborough families are reassured that in the Kingâs Speech the new Government has promised to put on statute the Hillsborough Law.
âIâve written to the Prime Minister offering my help, having been involved with the families, and I look forward to the Government reaching out to those of us, especially the families, who have experienced these tragedies so that future legislation can be shaped by the familiesâ own experiences.
âIt would be sad if a Hillsborough Law was produced and the families and survivors looked at it and said âwell that wouldnât have made any differenceâ.
âLetâs listen to the families of the Grenfell Tower scandal, of the infected blood scandal, of the Covid pandemic, of the Post Office scandal. Letâs listen to the people that have been badly treated, learn from their experience and change what needs to be changed.â
The former bishop spoke after meeting Hillsborough families as a review of the forensic pathology which followed the 1989 disaster was published.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said:
âThis report is a stark reminder of the extent to which the families were failed and this government is committed to helping right the wrongs.
âWe are introducing the Hillsborough Law, which will place a duty of candour on all public servants and authorities, building a culture of honesty and integrity, and ensuring that the institutional defensiveness and coverups seen in the wake of tragedies like Hillsborough are never repeated.â
The review was one of 25 recommendations made in Rt Revd Jonesâs 2017 report The Patronising Disposition Of Unaccountable Power, which looked at the experiences of the families of the 97 football fans who died because of the crush at the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest on April 15 1989.