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To: The families of those killed on Bloody Sunday
Solidarity with the Bloody Sunday Families
We stand in solidarity with the families of the Bloody Sunday victims, and applaud their courage and dignity in their fight for justice.
Why is this important?
On 30th January 1972, 13 innocent people were shot and killed on the streets of Derry by the British Army's parachute regiment.
Soldier F has been acquitted of seven charges relating to murder and attempted murder on Bloody Sunday. More than 50 years on, not one member of the British Army or the political establishment has been held criminally liable. The judge noted that delay and the perjury involved in the evidence of other soldiers as factors in the evidence failing to meet the required threshold for a conviction.
The strength and dignity of the families of the Bloody Sunday victims stands in direct contrast to the atrocity and injustice that brought them together.
They must have justice, and we stand with them.
Soldier F has been acquitted of seven charges relating to murder and attempted murder on Bloody Sunday. More than 50 years on, not one member of the British Army or the political establishment has been held criminally liable. The judge noted that delay and the perjury involved in the evidence of other soldiers as factors in the evidence failing to meet the required threshold for a conviction.
The strength and dignity of the families of the Bloody Sunday victims stands in direct contrast to the atrocity and injustice that brought them together.
They must have justice, and we stand with them.