Yesterdays incredible Memorial Service at Anfield, attended by 30,000 people, provided a fitting tribute to the 96 Liverpool supporters who lost their lives 20 years ago this week.
In addition to the thousands who travelled to Anfield to pay their respects, supporters around the country and the world did so in their own way.
Services were held in Sheffield and Nottingham and across Merseyside public transport and shopping centres came to a standstill for the 2 minutes silence at 3.06pm.
The 96 victims of the Hillsborough tragedy are owed the truth.
It is a stain on British justice that, after 20 years, families of Liverpool fans who had the life crushed out of them still have to fight for what should be theirs by right.
Sports Secretary Andy Burnham, a Scouser held in high regard by the people of the city, was booed by some of the 30,000 fans at yesterday's memorial service when he told them he was representing Gordon Brown.
He should be left in no doubt that the families of the dead will never rest until they get justice and answers to the uncomfortable questions that have been swept under the carpet.
The intransigence of the Establishment is unacceptable. Cold- hearted political and bureaucratic stonewalling is contemptible after so many perished. Fans and families have behaved with great dignity and the scenes at Anfield two decades on require a positive response.