As a person from Liverpool, I will tell you why the people of Liverpool don't mourn Heysel in the same way as Hillsborough - its pretty simple - its because they didn't lose anyone at Heysel.
Do you hold memorials and mourn the deaths of strangers every year?
No neither do i ...
The dead where not the Liverpool fans, so there is no personal loss for them.
Of course they feel sympathy for those who died, but it does not affect their lives in the same way as the loss of their own kin does.
96 people were lost, many very young - so assuming each of them them had say, 4-5 immediate family, another 10-15 cousins and aunties and uncles, then say each had around 7-10 closer friends, and their siblings friends
kids would also have had about 30-40 wider circle friends, around 30 classmates and a further say 100 or so school mates
or adults also perhaps 10 workmates, another 5 college friends - times that by 96 and thats a hell of a lot of people - in a city of 466,000, who are affected by Hillborough!
Most people knew someone who died or who was extremely affected by it
I knew someone - I was his sisters best friend at school, and spent many a day in his house.
Do you really think the people who lost family at Heysel do not have memorials, and remember them too?
you don't know because its not in our news, but doesn't mean it doesn't happen.
But it does not go unnoticed in Liverpool either - they do remember it at anfield etc - just not as much as Hillsborough
comparing it to other disasters is a pretty idiotic thing really and adds nothing to the argument of those that oppose the level of mourning.
If other towns that have had disasters want to have memorials etc then they could, and no-one in Liverpool would say a word, you cannot say people are not allowed to care as much because other people don't - it is not Liverpools fault other towns don't care.
The fact that its so big in the news at the moment, is because its the 25th anniversary, and because finally, the truth has come out, the true horrendous story, the cover up, the treatment, the lies etc etc - people have, after a 25 years inquiry, finally got their answers - and thats pretty newsworthy, especially since it involves underhand and downright abhorrent actions of high level police officers etc.
I for one am proud to be from Liverpool when it comes to Hillsborough - there are not many cities that could unite in the way Liverpool does, not many football teams that forget their rivalry and join forces, in the way Liverpool and Everton does.
Any city that feels so strongly and cares so deeply about its people - even the ones who didn't lose anyone, or were not even borne - is one to be respected.
The people of Liverpool wanted something done or changed and they went and made it happen.
They never gave up.