A CHESTER woman whose son died in the 1989 Hillsborough football stadium disaster has taken part in a campaign march for justice.

Anne Williams, 68, of Blacon, lost her 15-year-old son Kevin in the tragedy which saw 95 other fans lose their lives.

Anne joined four other mothers who had lost relatives in the tragedy and hundreds of other protesters in the march.

They delivered a petition with more than 40,000 signatures to the steps of 10 Downing Street in aid of the Justice for the 96 campaign.

And Anne was delighted with the support received from people in London along the march.

She said: “We had such a good reception, people were stopping and shaking our hands, we even had people on boats in the River Thames showing their support.

“It was so well-organised. We walked with children and a dog and so many others to No 10 so we could deliver the petition to the Prime Minister.”

Anne has campaigned for a new inquest to be heard into the disaster after the Taylor Inquiry controversially limited the main inquest to events up until 3.15pm on the day of Hillsborough.

This prevented evidence being heard surrounding how Kevin Williams died.

“We have had to deal with grieving and mourning, but we still don’t have the answers into how our loved ones died. These mums can’t move on with their lives until all this is sorted because they never really knew what happened.

“We have done this march to keep it in the public eye, and to let the government know the message is we will always keep coming back in our fight. Enough is enough.”