Figen Murray Martyn Hett Paul Greaney Manchester reports prevention Extreme and Figen Murray Martyn Hett Paul Greaney Manchester

'They were, each and every one of them, unique and special people' - tributes as Manchester Arena bombing inquiry draws to a close

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Tributes were paid to the 'unique and special' lives lost in the Manchester Arena bombing as evidence at the public inquiry into the atrocity drew to a close.

Hearings began on September 7, 2020, and continued, remotely, through the Covid pandemic lockdown. Split into 14 chapters, the inquiry has examined aspects of the terror attack in painstaking detail, with dozens of witnesses called and hundreds of statements gathered. READ MORE: Paul Greaney QC, counsel to the inquiry, said on Tuesday - day 192 of the inquiry - that no more oral evidence would be given 'in relation to the deeply complex and highly important issue of the adequacy of the emergency response on the night of the Arena attack'.

Further evidence surrounding MI5 and counter-terrorism police will be heard over a day in February - followed by two days of closing statements from counsel representing beavered families and other parties involved in the inquiry on the 'planning and preparation of the attack, preventability and the radicalisation' of mass murderer Salman Abedi, whose suicide bomb killed 22.

Figen Murray, mother of victim Martyn Hett, 29, said as evidence concluded 'it seems that every chapter of the inquiry highlights the failures of the security and emergency services'.

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk
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