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ITALIA
25-12-1956
Bangor City (Belfast) IRLANDA Anni 37
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Remembering Belfast
man Patrick
Radcliffe who died in Heysel tragedy
by Adrian Rutherford
Patrick Radcliffe should never
have been at Heysel. He wasn't a Liverpool fan. Nor did
he follow Juventus, the great italian side also
contesting the 1985 European Cup final. Indeed, he had
little interest in football at all. But a twist of fate
meant the 37-year-old from Belfast was among the 58,000
crowd on a night of tragedy for the sport. Today marks
the 30th anniversary of the disaster in which 39 fans
died after a wall at the crumbling stadium in Brussels
collapsed. The horror unfolded as Juventus supporters
attempted to escape a violent charge by Liverpool fans.
Most of the dead were italians. The only Briton killed
was Mr Radcliffe. Originally from east Belfast, he had
been working in Brussels as an archivist with the then
European Economic Community. His twin brother George
still lives in Belfast. "Patrick was my twin brother, he
was my best friend," he told the Belfast Telegraph. "He
was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. "The
final on May 29, 1985 should have been a great spectacle,
bringing together two powerhouses of the football world
in that era. Liverpool, the reigning European champions,
were aiming for a fifth triumph. Facing them were the
Turin side, one of the most famous names in italian
football, boasting stars such as Michel Platini and
Marco Tardelli. The venue was the ageing Heysel stadium
in the north west of the Belgian capital.Mr Radcliffe
had been working in the city for several years. Educated
at Campbell College in Belfast and Oxford University, he
worked briefly for the Public Record Office in Northern
Ireland. After marrying an English woman he lived for a
period in Carlisle, where he was a senior archivist with
Cumbria County Council. He left in 1980 to work in
Brussels, where he was compiling a history of the EEC.
The couple lived in Hoeliaart, a suburb of Brussels.
According to his brother, Patrick had little interest in
football. "He wasn't a football fan.
He had gone with a
Dutch friend to the match, but he wasn't much of a fan,"
added George. "He was working in the European Economic
Community, as it then was, in the historical archive.
"He lived in Brussels, and the final was being played
there. "His Dutch friend wanted to go to the match and
it was a bit of an event, so he ended up going to it too.
"This was a very different era for football. Played in
sub-standard stadiums and with an endemic hooligan
problem, it had little of the prestige or glamour of
modern times. When the 1985 FA Cup quarter-final between
Millwall and Luton Town was marred by large-scale
violence, the Government responded by setting up a "war
cabinet" to tackle the problem. However, the carnage at
Heysel was on a scale not seen before.Violence erupted
about an hour before kick-off after a drink-fuelled
rampage by Liverpool supporters. A retaining wall
separating the opposing fans collapsed as the italian
club's fans tried to escape the stampede.The 39 dead
comprised 32 italians, four Belgians, two French and Mr
Radcliffe. He was not involved in hooliganism of any
type. "It was just one of those things - the wrong place
at the wrong time," George added. He had seen the
breaking news reports of the violence at Heysel that
evening, but had no reason to suspect his brother would
be caught up in the chaos. It was only later, when he
received a call from Patrick's wife, that he learnt his
brother was among the dead. "It was a shock - quite a
blow," he said. "I remember ringing to speak to him, but
actually I spoke to his wife. She said he was at the
match, which surprised me. Then she rang me back later
on. I was aware there had been some trouble at the game.
I think I saw it on the news, but I never thought
Patrick would be there. "It was a complete shock. "Mr
Radcliffe later visited the stadium, which was rebuilt
for Euro 2000, which Belgium co-hosted with The
Netherlands.He still keeps in touch with Dennis, his
brother's companion at Heysel. "I still exchange
Christmas cards with him," he added.This year marks the
30th anniversary of the disaster, a landmark made all
the more poignant by the fact Juventus are back in the
final this year.For Mr Radcliffe, it is likely to stir
memories of that terrible night. "Yes - it is important,"
he said. "I remember the 25th anniversary, for example.
It reminds you of it all. It brings back the memories of
what happened".
Source:
Belfasttelegraph.co.uk © 29 May 2015
Photo:
Paddydillon.co.uk ©
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HEYSEL Ireland’s
untold stories
by Michael Foley
Thirty years on, four
men reflect on the tragedy that changed their lives,
writes Michael Foley.
The only Briton killed in last
night’s football disaster was an Ulsterman. With the
death toll at 38, with more than 350 people injured,
police in the Belgian capital of Brussels today named
the man as 37 year-old Patrick Radcliffe. A native of
Belfast, Mr Radcliffe worked as an archivist with the
EEC in Brussels. Belfast Telegraph, May 30, 1985. It
began with a phone call from Belfast to Brussels. The
European Cup final between Liverpool and Juventus was on
television but George Radcliffe didn’t need to consider
his timing. His brother was never interested in
football. Patrick and George had grown up in east
Belfast, a pair of academically-minded twins destined
for college in Oxford and good jobs. George would
lecture in accounting at Queen’s University. Patrick
worked in Brussels as an archivist for the European
Commission. He married Sarah and settled in Hoeliaart, a
suburb of Brussels. But tonight, Patrick wasn’t home.
George didn’t know Patrick had gone to the game with a
Dutch friend from work. He didn’t know that English fans
had rioted and forced thousands of supporters into a
crush in one part of the Heysel stadium. He didn’t know
a wall had collapsed under the pressure. He didn’t know
dozens of people already lay dead on the terraces. He
didn’t know his brother was lost somewhere among them.
Sarah had already called the police to report him
missing. "She didn’t know what had happened," says
Radcliffe. He bought an airline ticket that night and
headed for Brussels. Since Ireland had joined the EEC
the Irish population in Brussels had been swollen by
diplomats and officials. A GAA club had been formed.
Most of its members also played for a local soccer team,
FC Irlande.
A new team kit had arrived that month with
an offer to provide tickets for the European Cup final.
The club took 26 tickets for a neutral section at the
corner of the ground, Pen Z. It was a night that drew
people from everywhere. Ronan Harbison met Gerry
O’Sullivan, a 70-year-old man from Mallow, whose
daughter worked in Brussels. He fell into conversation
with a Wolves fan. "I thought I’d come seeing as I’ll
probably never see Wolves play Juventus," he said. They
passed through the turnstiles together into Pen Z
without noticing any trouble. "The crush started," says
Harbison, "but you expected a bit of crushing on the
terraces at that time. "Then stones started coming in.
They were taking off crumbling pieces of concrete. The
English fella with me got hit on the head. The concrete
landed on my shoulder. There was nowhere else for it to
go. I got some of his blood on me. As the crush
developed, something had to give. Then the wall broke.
People fell like water flowing out of a bottle". Liam
Breslin from Mullingar was further up the terrace,
wedged in the crowd with two friends. The mood there was
different. Before Breslin had even entered the stadium
another Irish friend with his son decided to go home. As
the crush got tighter one of Breslin’s friends forced
his way to the wall, climbed up and braved the steep
drop on the other side. "I saw people around me getting
hit by rocks and going down. The crowd was so tight they
were trampled on. We were like sardines. I kept looking
up to avoid getting hit. There was some fine, stout
italian fellas who had been having great fun. Once they
went down they never came back up". When the wall
collapsed, the surge of people tumbled towards the
bottom of the terrace. Breslin held his feet. When it
stopped, he looked around him. "I noticed heaps around
the place.
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They were a grey colour. They
were heaps of bodies. To get down to the pitch I had to
walk over these bodies". Ciaran Fanning had travelled to
the game with his father, Pat, and an Egyptian
schoolfriend, Mohib. In a way, it was a farewell to
Brussels. His father was among Ireland’s permanent EEC
representation. Ciaran was 17 and finishing school
before heading home that summer. Football was their
shared passion. Brussels had been their gateway to some
great games. They also knew Heysel and how to find the
best spots: enter the terrace at the top where the crowd
was always heaviest, edge down to the bottom by the wall
and swing back up to the space down front. This time,
they were swallowed by a swamp of people. Ciaran and
Mohib were quickly separated from Pat and tumbled out on
the edge of the crush, looking across at the vast no-man’s
land created by the rioters. "Missiles were being thrown
across: stones, flagpoles," says Fanning. "Below us we
then noticed loads of belongings, bits of clothes, bags.
There were a few people just sitting down in these empty
areas with their heads in their hands". Ciaran and Mohib
stood on the edge of chaos. The crush was behind them.
Across the empty terrace, through the line of hooligans
firing missiles, they could see space at the Liverpool
end. Their Liverpool scarves were their passport. "We
ran across," says Fanning. "We got beyond these guys,
they weren’t people you wanted to come across.
We moved
through the crowd and found some space". As the Belgian
police finally formed a line to hem in the Liverpool
support, Fanning looked back at the empty terrace they
had just crossed and spotted his father walking up the
steps, looking for his son. Ciaran tried to break the
police line to reach him, but the police refused to let
him through. He had to stay and watch the game. Back in
Pen Z, Ronan Harbison was imprisoned in the devastation
caused by the crush. He stopped by a young boy on the
ground. His face was black and blue. "If he wasn’t
dead," he says, "he was very close to it". He turned to
the rioters and threw his hands in the air. "Stop !,"
Harbison shouted. "There’s people dying here !"* "F***
off you italian bastard !," replied one. "They were in a
frenzy," says Breslin. Harbison looked around and saw an
italian man cradling a woman in his arms, screaming for
help. Harbison took her hand to find a pulse. He checked
her neck. Nothing. He reached inside her denim jacket to
feel for a heartbeat. "Batte ?," asked the italian. "Beating
?" Harbison laid her on the ground and administered the
kiss of life. Inside a few moments, she exploded in a
fit of coughing, throwing up mouthfuls of blood all over
Harbison. "The last time I saw them they were hugging
each other," he says. "There was a man there in his 70s
and someone who’d seen me with the girl asked if I could
do the same for him, but he was too far gone". Another
man lay howling in pain with broken ribs. Harbison and
another man snapped the belt on his trousers to provide
some relief. Gerry O’Sullivan, the pensioner from Mallow,
scrambled out of the crush without his shoes and socks.
Harbison saw someone with a broken leg carried away on
crash barrier, a young policeman in riot gear wandering
aimlessly down the steps through the dead. He saw
Juventus fans turning on a BBC reporter and the
blackened faces of the crushed and dying. He saw a
policeman crying uncontrollably. They had come too late.
It was all too late.
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Liam Breslin was down on the
pitch looking up at the terrace, still transfixed by the
piles of bodies. He wandered into the main stand. By
kick-off time he found himself in the VIP area as the
game played itself out. Afterwards he went back to the
Green Anchovy, an Irish pub in Brussels. Some of his
friends were there. More weren’t found safe till the
morning. Ronan Harbison was carried away to hospital
covered in other people’s blood. Pat Fanning had gone
back to his office. Ciaran was still missing. He thought
about the panic he could start if he called home now. He
decided to wait until the end of the game before going
home. Ciaran would surely be back by then. But he wasn’t.
Somewhere in the middle of Brussels, Ciaran Fanning was
being herded along with the Liverpool supporters, trying
to break away and catch a tram home. When he did, he had
a choice of two trams to two different stations. As he
got off at the other end, his mother was waiting for him.
"She hugged me, she couldn’t believe I was fine. I knew
dad hadn’t been in the stadium so I assumed he was fine.
But I couldn’t believe so many people had died. When I
realised what had actually gone on and what dad and mam
had been through, that was very upsetting. But there was
nothing I could have done". By the time George Radcliffe
reached Brussels on Thursday morning, he already knew.
Patrick was lying in a military hospital near Heysel.
Sarah had identified him. George stayed behind at their
house. "It was very disturbing," he says. "Very
upsetting. But what could you do ?". The newspapers in
Belfast carried the story that morning. George described
him as a "true European". As the family grieved, Kevin
Sheehy, Radcliffe’s sister’s boyfriend, spoke to
reporters. "We were shocked that Patrick was at the
match at all, because he had little or no interest. It’s
important people know that Patrick was not involved in
what went on. We’re all completely stunned and shattered".
On June 10, Barry McGuigan stood on a stage in Belfast
city centre shaking his world featherweight title belt
as thousands came together on the warring streets of
Belfast for the first time in years. In Downpatrick a
congregation at the local church were remembering
Patrick Radcliffe. Six months later George was visited
by Denis, his brother’s friend who brought him to
Heysel. "He talked a bit about it," says Radcliffe. "He
was thrown forward and Patrick wasn’t. That’s how he
explained it". Liam Breslin lives in Brussels and still
savours sport’s biggest days, but never shook from his
memory the grey dust that lingered over the bodies of
the dead. Ronan Harbison suffered nightmares for a while,
but they passed in time. Once, on a trip to Pairc Ui
Chaoimh a few years ago for a hurling game between Cork
and Tipperary, he felt the same fear as Heysel again as
the crowds choked the tunnel beneath the main stand
after the game. The same chill ran through Ciaran
Fanning once at Lansdowne Road at a rugby international
when the crush at the Havelock Square end got too much.
Back in Belfast George still exchanges Christmas cards
with Denis, his brother’s companion at Heysel. They
didn’t look for reasons or answers to explain. "I
certainly didn’t blame," says Radcliffe. "Patrick was in
the wrong place at the wrong time. Football doesn’t
interest me. It’s not something I wanted to get into.
Obviously Patrick and I were very close but I’ve managed
to go on. That’s how it goes. Death just happens".
Source:
Thesundaytimes.co.uk © 17 May 2015
Photos: En.wikipedia.org ©
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