For the latest Oldham news sign up to the MyOldham newsletter here
21.06.2021 - 23:43 / manchestereveningnews.co.uk
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
A leading fireman has blamed a 'massive breakdown in communications' for a two-hour delay in getting firefighters to the Manchester Arena on the night of the bombing.
Fire engines based at Manchester Central fire station on Thompson Street - just a few hundred metres from the venue - were ordered to wait at Philips Park fire station, almost three miles away in Miles Platting, the continuing public inquiry into the
For the latest Oldham news sign up to the MyOldham newsletter here
Get the latest United transfer window updates, news and analysis delivered straight to your inbox every day for free
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Get the inside track on the big stories from Manchester courts with our weekly newsletter
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Get the latest United transfer window updates, news and analysis delivered straight to your inbox every day for free
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Get the latest United transfer window updates, news and analysis delivered straight to your inbox every day for free
Sign up to the M.E.N.'s Manchester Family newsletter for all the latest from school closures to ways to entertain the kids
Hundreds were injured and 22 killed when a suicide bomber detonated a homemade explosive device in the Arena foyer at the end of Ariana Grande‘s show at the venue on May 22, 2017.A public inquiry into the attacks began last September, with the report’s chairman Sir John Saunders saying that bomber Salman Abedi should have been identified as a threat by security at the venue.
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
Don't miss a thing by getting the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
LONDON -- A public inquiry into a mass attack at a 2017 Ariana Grande concert in northwest England concluded Thursday that “serious shortcomings” by venue operators, security staff and police helped a suicide bomber who killed 22 people carry out his “evil intentions."Retired judge John Saunders, who is leading the ongoing inquiry, said Salman Abedi should have been identified as a threat by those in charge of security at Manchester Arena “and a disruptive intervention undertaken.”“Had that