Hillsborough
15 April 1989 FA Cup semi-final crush at Sheffield; 97 Liverpool fans killed.
Last refreshed: 14 May 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics
Nearly 40 years on, will Parliament finally make the cover-up of Hillsborough impossible to repeat?
Timeline for Hillsborough
Mentioned in: Mexico City doubles police after crush
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: Four die in Mexico World Cup crush
2026 FIFA World CupKing's Speech: 27 bills, no RPA Bill
UK Local Elections 2026What happened at Hillsborough in 1989?
Why did it take so long for Hillsborough victims to get justice?
What is the Hillsborough Law and why was it introduced in 2026?
Background
The Hillsborough disaster occurred on 15 April 1989 at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield during an FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest. A crush in the Leppings Lane terrace — caused by a decision by South Yorkshire Police to open a gate and allow entry to an already overcrowded section — killed 97 Liverpool supporters (the 97th victim, Andrew Devine, died in 2021 from injuries sustained that day). A further 766 people were injured. It remains the deadliest stadium disaster in British sporting history.
The disaster was followed by a 23-year campaign against an institutional cover-up. Initial media reports, led by The Sun, falsely blamed drunken Liverpool fans; South Yorkshire Police briefed journalists to deflect responsibility. The original 1991 Taylor Report correctly identified police failure, but this finding was suppressed. The 2012 Hillsborough Independent Panel, chaired by the Bishop of Liverpool James Jones, concluded that the 96 original deaths were avoidable, that the police had mounted an unlawful cover-up, and that the original verdicts of accidental death were unsafe. New inquests in 2016 returned verdicts of unlawful killing for all 96 victims.
Hillsborough's legacy shapes British public life beyond sport. It drove a root-and-branch reform of stadium safety and the removal of standing terraces in top-flight football. It spawned the long campaign for a statutory Duty of Candour for public officials — the 'Hillsborough Law' — which became the Public Office (Accountability) Bill in the 13 May 2026 King's Speech. The disaster is the founding reference point for discussions of institutional accountability across UK public life.