Stardust families to receive €24 million redress payments

ireland
Stardust Families To Receive €24 Million Redress Payments
After a more than 40-year campaign for justice, an inquest in April found that the 48 victims had been unlawfully killed.
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By Cillian Sherlock, PA

A €24 million redress scheme for the families of those affected by the Stardust fire has been approved by Government.

48 people were killed when the blaze ripped through the Dublin nightclub in 1981.

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After a more than 40-year campaign for justice, an inquest in April found that the 48 victims had been unlawfully killed.

Stardust
The Stardust club after the fire. Photo: Archive/PA.

A previous finding in 1982 said that the fire had been started deliberately, a theory the families never accepted.

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That ruling was dismissed in 2009, leading to the latest inquests for the victims, who were aged from 16 to 27 and mostly came from the surrounding north Dublin area.

A majority decision from the jury found the blaze, which broke out in the early hours of Valentine’s Day 1981, was instead caused by an electrical fault in the hot press of the bar.

Days after the decision, Taoiseach Simon Harris apologised to the victims, survivors and families of the tragedy, saying the State had failed them.

A special Cabinet meeting was scheduled for Friday afternoon to sign off on the ex-gratia payment, which had been agreed with campaigners through a series of meetings.

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Stardust ceremony of commemoration
Taoiseach Simon Harris with Stardust survivor and campaigner Antoinette Keegan. Photo: Damien Storan/PA.

The Taoiseach, along with Tanaiste Micheal Martin, Green Party leader Roderic O’Gorman and Justice Minister Helen McEntee, welcomed the conclusion of the negotiations with Stardust campaigners.

Mr Harris said: “The State understands very clearly and I understand extraordinarily clearly having met with the families, that you can never put any price or any amount on the loss of a life.

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“When I met the Stardust families for the first time, they said to me ‘before you deliver the State apology, please read the pen portraits, know and understand our loss, understand our pain insofar as humanely possible’.

Speaking to RTÉ, he added: “That’s what I set about doing and that’s why when I issued the State apology, I was very determined to use the words of the families in terms of how they described their loved ones.

“I absolutely know, as do the families, that there is no sum of money that in any manner or means replaces the loss of a loved one. Absolutely not.”

The Government said the redress package is the culmination of a series of steps the Government has taken to recognise the State failure to provide truth and justice over more than forty years to the families.

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If the overall figure is apportioned equally by the 48 people who were killed in the fire, each family may receive a redress payment of €500,000 for the death of their loved one.

 

Speaking after the meeting, Darragh Mackin, partner at Phoenix Law, who led the negotiations with the Government on behalf of the families, said: “Today’s development is the crystallisation of the intense and relentless engagement with the Government and Sara Moorehead SC over the last number of months.

“The unprecedented sum paid to the families is reflective of the unprecedented miscarriage of justice bestowed on these families.

“It is impossible to put a value on the loss these families have sustained.

“However, these payments go a considerable way to providing support to these families for all their relentless efforts and life investment, which they so courageously devoted over the last four decades.

“These payments are the gateway to a new dawn for the families of these victims.

“A new dawn whereby the truth is known, and where they can now each return to a life free from injustice and litigation.

Stardust nightclub fire inquest
Solicitor Darragh Mackin speaking to the media with Stardust campaigners. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.

“A new dawn whereby their families will be compensated with the greatest prize of all: the return of their families and friends who, for four decades, have been absent due to their unrivalled devotion to justice.

“In line with this week, like our Northside Olympic hero Kellie Harrington, these families leave the stage as champions.

“Testament must be paid to (Simon Harris), the Minister for Justice (Helen McEntee) and Ms Moorehead, whose commitment and dedication to this process has been unrivalled.

“In line with the Taoiseach’s words in the apology, the State no longer works against these families but works with them. In line with their commitment, they have taken steps to ensure these families are brought back in from the cold.”

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