Hillsborough inquests: Why The Sun's front page has upset people
- Published

Speculation about Rita Ora's love life and a report on the use of WhatsApp by David Cameron's team are on the front page of The Sun today.
But the vast majority of the other national newspapers all lead with the same, very different story.
That's the news that an inquest jury has found that the 96 football fans who died in the 1989 Hillsborough disaster were unlawfully killed.
"As disgusting as it is unsurprising. They have no shame," said Gary Lineker.
Lineker's tweet reflects the feeling of many on social media, who say The Sun, who blamed Liverpool fans for the disaster 27 years ago, should have reflected the story on their front cover.
Stan Collymore tweeted: "Shut them down.", external
The inquest jury has also concluded that the behaviour of the supporters didn't cause or contribute to the UK's worst sports stadium tragedy.
The fans died as a result of a crush on the terraces occupied by Liverpool supporters attending the FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest on 15 April 1989.

On pages eight and nine of today's edition, The Sun has pictured all 96 victims and reported on the news accurately.
It also runs an article "unreservedly" apologising to the families of the Hillsborough victims, as it did 12 years ago and on its cover four years ago.
The Times, another paper owned Rupert Murdoch, who also controls The Sun, did not at first feature Hillsborough coverage on the front page either.
A later edition of the paper has replaced a picture of snow in Teesside with a photograph of families of the Hillsborough victims celebrating yesterday's result.
Around the time the front page was first published, Tony Barrett, the Merseyside football writer for The Times tweeted: "Unbelievable".
He has since tweeted: "To everyone who's been let down I'm so sorry.", external
The Times features the story later on in the paper, reporting on the results of the inquest in detail.
The paper later tweeted to say they had covered the story heavily on their digital version and had made a "mistake" with the first edition of the paper.
"We fixed it for the second edition," the official statement added., external
Four days after the disaster, The Sun, at the time edited by Kelvin MacKenzie, ran a front page with the headline: "The Truth".
It claimed fans pick-pocketed victims and attacked police who were trying to help.

The former editor has previously apologised for the cover, saying he was "misled" about the events of the day.
"As I have said before, the headline I published was wrong and I am profoundly sorry for the hurt it caused," he said in a statement released yesterday.
In 2012 the Hillsborough Independent Panel produced a damning report, saying police and ambulance services had made "strenuous attempts to deflect the blame onto innocent fans".
It also confirmed that 164 police statements were altered, 116 "to remove comments unfavourable to police."
Prime Minister David Cameron apologised for the injustice the families had faced - although the PM in 1989 was the late Margaret Thatcher.

Since then The Sun has been unpopular with many Liverpool residents and fans - with some newsagents selling it, but "under the counter".
But it is not the only media organisation to draw complaints about its coverage of Hillsborough.
Writing in a column in The Times in the days after the disaster, Edward Pearce described Liverpool, external as "the capital of self-pity" and "that a good and sufficient minority of you behave like animals".
Other newspapers such as The Daily Mirror and The Daily Star carried claims that Liverpool fans had been drunk and unruly on the day of the disaster.
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