In pictures: Bloody Sunday report finally for families
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Page last updated at 16:24 GMT, Tuesday, 15 June 2010 17:24 UK
- Relatives of those shot dead on Bloody Sunday celebrated outside the Guildhall in Londonderry after the long-awaited Saville Inquiry report ruled that all those killed were innocent.
- Crowds cheered as they watched Prime Minister David Cameron deliver the findings - which unequivocally blamed the Army for one of the most controversial days in Northern Ireland's history - on a giant screen.
- Mr Cameron said what happened on Bloody Sunday - when British soldiers opened fire on civil rights marchers in Northern Ireland in 1972 - was "unjustifiable" and wrong.
- Earlier, families of those killed and injured retraced the original route of the march to Londonderry's Guildhall to read the long-awaited Bloody Sunday report.
- Lord Saville's Bloody Sunday inquiry - which cost £195m and took 12 years to complete - had arrived in the city's Guildhall in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
- Bereaved relatives were comforted by Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness on the march. Mr McGuinness was also in the Bogside on the fatal day, Saville concluded.
- As they arrived at the Guildhall to read a preview of the report, families had clutched placards bearing the photographs of their dead loved ones, with the words: "Set the Truth Free".
- Kay Duddy, whose brother Jackie was the first person to be shot dead, said she had carried in her handbag the white handkerchief a priest had used to try to staunch the blood from her dying brother's wounds, "to give her strength".