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Sister of Stardust fire victim calls for official state apology

An inquest on Thursday found that the 48 young people who died in the Dublin blaze in 1981 were unlawfully killed.

Rebecca Black
Friday 19 April 2024 05:28 EDT
Survivors, family members and supporters in the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin after the Stardust fire inquest verdict was returned (Brian Lawless/PA)
Survivors, family members and supporters in the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin after the Stardust fire inquest verdict was returned (Brian Lawless/PA) (PA Wire)

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The Irish Government has been urged to ā€œdo the right thingā€ and issue an official state apology over the Stardust fire tragedy.

Some 48 young people died in the blaze that ripped through the nightclub in north Dublin in 1981.

On Thursday, following fresh inquests, a jury returned a verdict that they were unlawfully killed.

It comes after a previous finding in 1982 that the fire had been started deliberately.

But on Thursday a majority decision from the jury of seven women and five men found the blaze, which broke out in the early hours of Valentineā€™s Day 1981, started due to an electrical fault in the hot press of the bar.

Families of the victims embraced one another after the verdict at the Pillar Room in Dublin city.

They are set to meet with Taoiseach Simon Harris.

Susan Behan, whose brother John Colgan was among those killed, said the Government should issue an official state apology.

ā€œI feel itā€™s important for us because I think we were ignored. I really do feel we were ignored. I feel they were so disrespectful to us,ā€ she told RTE Radioā€™s Morning Ireland Programme.

ā€œWe were left to our own devices, that shouldnā€™t have been the case, so now it shouldnā€™t be a big deal for them to turn around and say ā€˜weā€™re sorry, we got it wrongā€™, and apologise to us.

ā€œItā€™s the very least they could do and it shouldnā€™t take them a long time to know what to do.

ā€œDo the right thing and give the public apology. We deserve it. Our loved ones deserve it.ā€

She said the verdict on Thursday ā€œmeant so much to finally hear our loved ones were unlawfully killedā€.

ā€œSo many emotions. Itā€™s been such a long time coming,ā€ she said.

ā€œWhen we heard it, it was just unreal. All those emotions, 43 years, then we finally, finally hear those words. It was just unbelievable. It really was.

ā€œItā€™s very hard to put it into words to be honest because this morning I actually canā€™t believe it. So relieved that finally we have the justice we deserved.ā€

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