Margaret Aspinall has joined the Premier League for a new program highlighting painful and tragic abuse as the organization prepares to launch educational material on the subject.
From Monday 13 November, more than 18,000 primary schools and 60,000 teachers across England and Wales will have access to classroom lessons to help children understand the important issue of violence as part of the Premier League’s Primary Stars programme.
Margaret is the past chair of the Hillsborough Family Support Group. Her son James was one of 97 children, women and men who died in the Hillsborough disaster on 15 April 1989. He was only 18 at the time.
He said: “Football brings joy to many people around the world, but people don’t necessarily sing like that. The pain it causes is extreme. We don’t deserve to hear such songs.
If you hear this song, go to your manager and report it. Because with the right authorities, everything can change. “It is never acceptable to offend or offend anyone.
“Liverpool Football Club condemns all forms of tragic abuse in the strongest possible terms.
We will continue to work with the relevant authorities, stakeholders and other clubs to remove this from the game.
