HomePortalLatest imagesRegisterLog in

altText
altText
altText
altText
altText
altText

Share
 

 Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
Admin
Administrator
Administrator
Admin

Posts : 6136
Join date : 2009-08-15

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitimeTue Nov 17, 2009 3:36 pm

[size=75:17fw8rdh]Sofia echo Tue, Nov 17 2009

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts

The Liverpool Echo (no relation to The Sofia Echo) is reporting that the sisters of Michael Shields have won a national award for their dedication to getting him out of jail.

Shields was imprisoned in Bulgaria after being found guilty of attacking Varna-based barman Martin Georgiev. He was later transferred back to the UK to serve out the rest of his sentence before being pardoned by justice secretary Jack Straw in September.

Melissa and Laura Shields, who made 32 journeys to Bulgaria to visit their brother during his incarceration, were given the Cosmopolitan Ultimate Family Girls award at a star-studded ceremony in London. Michael Shields also attended.

The sisters were presented their award by model Abi Clancy. The winners were subsequently taken to meet Gordon Brown’s wife Sarah at Downing Street.

The Liverpool Echo quotes 30-year-old Melissa Shields as saying: "
It was a lovely night and we were made to feel very welcome. There were celebrities everywhere. Pixie Lott came over to congratulate us and I was chatting to Danni Minogue for ages. What put the icing on the cake was when Sarah Brown congratulated us. She told Michael she was very pleased he was free and was asking how my mum was because she remembered having tea with her when we were protesting in London during the campaign."


Laura Shields, 28, is quoted as saying: "
We fought for Michael from day one because he’s our brother and we’d do anything for him. You’ve got to protect and love each other because you don’t know what tomorrow might bring. We always knew he was innocent and we’re still getting used to finally having him back with us."


The newspaper quotes Cosmopolitan’s Editor, Louise Court, as saying: "
Melissa and Laura are an inspiration to us all and their courage and determination is phenomenal. This year’s awards have once again opened our eyes to many extraordinary and inspirational women."
Back to top Go down
http://www.ourbulgariaforum.com
krypton
Super user
Super user
krypton

Posts : 860
Join date : 2009-08-19

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitimeTue Nov 17, 2009 4:20 pm

Strange one this I never knew what make of it at the time and to be honest I still don't and if they have been awarded I'm that there is others who have done greater things that deserve it more sorry but that's my 2 penneth
Back to top Go down
nu2bg
Super user
Super user
nu2bg

Posts : 870
Join date : 2009-11-17

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitimeWed Nov 18, 2009 2:26 pm

I don't think your alone with your thoughts krypton
Back to top Go down
Admin
Administrator
Administrator
Admin

Posts : 6136
Join date : 2009-08-15

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitimeMon Jan 04, 2010 9:29 am

[size=75:2r11pi08]novinite (independent.co.uk) 4 January 2010


Michael Shields: Left with a Lingering Sense of Injustice


If Michael Shields thought that the authorities were going to help smooth his return back into normal life, he was sorely mistaken. The combined shortcomings of the British and Bulgarian legal and political systems had already condemned the young Liverpool football fan to serve four-and-a-half years in prison for a crime he did not commit.

So when it came to his release, after a prolonged and impassioned campaign by his family and the people of his home city against his wrongful conviction for the attempted murder of a Bulgarian waiter, he was inured to the prospect of being let down again.

"
If someone commits a crime and they get out of prison I know it's not much help but you do get a probation officer and they keep an eye on you. But no one has ever contacted me. I've never had anything from them, no offer of counselling or an offer of a reason why it happened,"
he says.

It is four months since the quietly spoken 23-year-old became the first Briton to be granted a royal pardon for a wrongful conviction overseas, and in that time he has begun to rebuild his life.

Shortly before Christmas, the young engineer found himself a job working on-site for a property management company. Still fit-looking from his time pumping iron at the prison gym, his hair longer now than in the pictures which publicised his campaign, work has provided a welcome change. In the immediate aftermath of his release, he spent long restless days in front of the television at his family home, trying not to mull over the sense of injustice burning away inside him. Life after jail poses considerable challenges for any former inmate. For those wrongly convicted those pressures can be immense.

Yet in many ways, admits Mr Shields, he has been lucky. He has a large and protective family and the support of a strong community of neighbours and fellow Liverpool FC fans. The club itself was pivotal in keeping up the pressure over his wrongful conviction, and he celebrated his first match back in the luxury of the directors' box at Anfield. His parents, Michael and Maria, who devoted all their energies to campaigning for his release, are having to adapt too. "
They are fine. You can see them getting better. They are smiling more. It affected them more than anyone,"
Mr Shields acknowledges. "
Through my family, I have had time to find my feet,"
he says.

Sitting in the front room of the smart terraced house in the Wavertree area of the city, with its vivid red colour scheme in tribute to Liverpool Football Club, he says he has found it easy to rekindle friendships that were put on ice when he was sentenced to 15 years by the court in Sofia in 2005 (though he declines to discuss whether he is now in a relationship). "
The first two months everything happened too fast. I just couldn't take it in ... I couldn't relax. I couldn't sit down and watch the telly. I had to keep myself occupied. The last four weeks have been better."
he says.

It was on the last day of his first-ever trip overseas, to see Liverpool win the Champions League, that normality was suspended for the young engineer, aged just 18 at the time. He was arrested by Bulgarian police investigating a brutal late-night attack on the waiter, Martin Georgiev, who had been punched to the ground and hit on the head with a heavy stone, leaving him severely injured. Failures in the inquiry, notably a flawed identity parade, meant Mr Shields was wrongly picked out. Another Liverpool fan, Graham Sankey, confessed to the assault, although he later withdrew his statement.

As protests grew back home, including an emotional display on the Kop at Anfield, the Supreme Court in Sofia in 2006 reduced the sentence on appeal, but refused to grant a retrial. Mr Shields was transferred to finish his sentence in the UK – but not until a benefit concert helped raise the £90,000 needed to pay off his outstanding costs, including £80,000 compensation to the victim.

Yet despite the ongoing doubts over the safety of the conviction, and the insistence of the High Court in London to the contrary, Justice Secretary Jack Straw remained adamant that it was not in his power to review the case. Following the submission of fresh evidence, Mr Straw eventually recommended a royal pardon. "
I thought that it wasn't going to happen. I thought, 'He's not going to do it'. I had no faith, or no hope, in Jack Straw whatsoever,"
Mr Shields recalls. "
They should have just looked at the facts of the case. When you look at the facts of the case it is there. When you bring politics into it, and you think these will be upset and those will be upset ... – but we were upset because of the miscarriage of justice,"
he says. The Shields family have yet to receive an official apology, and there is still no prospect of compensation. Even getting written confirmation of his pardon required a spectacular degree of effort, Mr Shields recalls. And "
The thing that wound me up most was getting no apology. I'm definitely still looking for one, and someone has got to give me one. I think I should get two – one from the British Government for doing nothing about it, and one should come from Bulgaria."


Jail was a difficult time for a young man from a close-knit family who had never been in trouble with the police before: "
It was frustrating that no one believes you, or frustrating that no one is doing nothing about it, or frustrating that people have got away with doing this thing to you... There were a few times when I had visits and I'd just say 'That's it: just forget about it – I don't want to know'."


Now he says he has to force himself to move on – even though the real culprit has never been brought to justice: "
I don't think about it. If I do, I get angry and bitter, so I just make myself not think about it,"
he says.

There remain serious obstacles to getting the retrial he seeks – not least that the victim picked him out in court. "
It was a horrible thing what happened to him ... It messes with your head. It should be important to the victim to see justice happen too,"
he says. To help fund the campaign Mr Shields has recounted his own version of events in his book, My Story. He continues to support other people wrongly jailed overseas, working with the campaign group Fair Trials Abroad.

But it is the small things he is relishing now. "
Four-and-a-half years is a long time, especially when you are young. Sometimes when I'm out, someone will say, 'Remember when this happened or then we did this,' and I'll have to say, 'I wasn't there – I was away'. Then I'll be left with bad feelings, though I like to think I'm wiser for it,"
he says. "
There were loads of things I missed – every little thing – but the fact that now I can go and see mates, or Saturday night I can just go for a drink... People take things for granted so much."
Back to top Go down
http://www.ourbulgariaforum.com
Admin
Administrator
Administrator
Admin

Posts : 6136
Join date : 2009-08-15

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitimeTue Jan 05, 2010 5:08 pm

[size=75:3h2h7ewg]Sofia echo 5 January 2010

Shields 'still expects apology'

Michael Shields, granted an official pardon by UK justice secretary Jack Straw in September 2009 after his wrongful conviction for attacking Bulgarian barman Martin Georgiev in 2005, has told the Independent newspaper that he still feels let down by the authorities in the aftermath of his release from jail.

Shields was initially jailed in Bulgaria before being transferred to a British prison. Shields' plight attracted the support of local media as well as prominent celebrities and Liverpool football club.

"
If someone commits a crime and they get out of prison I know it's not much help but you do get a probation officer and they keep an eye on you. But no one has ever contacted me. I've never had anything from them, no offer of counselling or an offer of a reason why it happened,"
he says.

Shields, who according to the newspaper, has now found a job working for a property company, said that he tries not to dwell on the injustice he suffered. "
I don't think about it. If I do, I get angry and bitter, so I just make myself not think about it,"
he says.

In particular, Shields says he is still awaiting an apology from both the British and the Bulgarian authorities.

"
The thing that wound me up most was getting no apology. I'm definitely still looking for one, and someone has got to give me one. I think I should get two – one from the British Government for doing nothing about it, and one should come from Bulgaria."


In the interview Shields says that, inevitably, he feels he has lost out on many experiences during the four-and-a-half years he spent in jail. "
Four-and-a-half years is a long time, especially when you are young. Sometimes when I'm out, someone will say, 'Remember when this happened or then we did this,' and I'll have to say, 'I wasn't there – I was away'. Then I'll be left with bad feelings, though I like to think I'm wiser for it,"
he says. "
There were loads of things I missed – every little thing – but the fact that now I can go and see mates, or Saturday night I can just go for a drink... People take things for granted so much."


According to the interview, Shields is now campaigning for other people wrongfully imprisoned abroad, working with the group Fair Trials Abroad.
Back to top Go down
http://www.ourbulgariaforum.com
Sponsored content




Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Empty
PostSubject: Re: Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts   Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts Icon_minitime

Back to top Go down
 

Michael Shields' sisters win award for freedom efforts

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

 Similar topics

-
» Roma Freedom Stoking Political Debate
» Bulgaria Gets Special Award at Moscow Tourism Expo ITM
» Taking the Michael now !!!
» Bulgaria Spearheads Efforts to Build 'Balkan' Hospital in Haiti
» EC Report Lauds Bulgaria's Efforts, Slams Judicial Results

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
 :: Media ?-