Birmingham pub bombing victims' families have legal aid request granted

Families of the victims of the Birmingham pub bombings have had a request for legal aid granted just days before inquest proceedings into the 1974 terror attacks are due to get under way.

The Government rejected a call from families for a special funding model to help them pay their legal costs at a reopened inquest.

They had asked Home Secretary Amber Rudd to establish a fund similar to that created for the families represented at the Hillsborough stadium disaster inquests but the request was turned down.

However, Ms Rudd did back an application for legal aid funding through the conventional route of the independent Legal Aid Agency (LAA).

The Government has confirmed that one application for funding has now been granted.

However, the timing of the funding decision sparked outcry from Birmingham MPs who pointed out that the inquest process is due to start at the end of October.

Twenty-one people were killed and 182 injured when suspected IRA bombs exploded in two city centre pubs on November 21 1974.

Jess Phillips, the Labour MP for Birmingham Yardley, said the victims had been "largely forgotten" as she read their names aloud during an adjournment debate in the Commons.

She said: "Without the fight from the families and the generosity of their lawyers, the inquest would never, ever have been resumed.

"Today is the 26th of October and the day after tomorrow on the 28th of October submissions are to be made on the scope and process of the resumed inquest."

Fellow Birmingham MP Richard Burden then intervened and said: "One thing I do hope that the minister will address in his summing up is that the months that the families had to wait, those just last few months between the inquest being granted and hearing the legal aid being granted, that just shows lack of respect and I do think an apology for that extra delay is something that would be useful."

Ms Phillips said: "I couldn't agree with you more. The families involved were told only yesterday that arrangements will be made for their legal teams to work with another firm and receive legal aid.

"Does the minister think that three days notice on this matter is sufficient?"

Ms Phillips said the families felt "misled and fobbed off" in their quest for justice.

"The appalling way that the funding for their case has been handled pushes them, and I have to say me, into really doubting that those in power want to see justice done," she said.

"Like with Hillsborough before them, this is a David and Goliath fight."

She stressed the importance of parity of funding for the inquest so that all sides involved are adequately represented with the families' lawyers having worked on a pro bono basis to date.

Justice Minister Sir Oliver Heald said: "The Legal Aid Agency decides legal aid applications entirely independently. It isn't for politicians to interfere in their independent decision-making.

"Two applications have been received by the Legal Aid Agency. So far one has been granted and a way has been suggested of finding the other application to be within the rules.

"These applications don't cover all the families that have been bereaved and so it may be that there will be further applications."

He added: "Whether it's funding through the legal aid fund or it's funding through the Hillsborough-type of approach, isn't so much the issue as the fact that the families should be represented if the case requires it, and that's the system we're trying to create."

Six men wrongly convicted of the murders - the Birmingham Six - were released in 1991 after their convictions were overturned by the Court of Appeal.

Relatives campaigned for years for the inquest to be reopened to probe what they said was a litany of unanswered questions, including claims that police failed to act on intelligence that could have prevented the attacks.

Earlier this year, senior coroner for Birmingham and Solihull Louise Hunt ruled that fresh hearings should take place.

Preliminary hearings are scheduled for November.

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