Hillsborough campaigner Andy Burnham has vowed to hold to account the "rogue civil servant" responsible for using government computers to post "sickening" comments about the football disaster.
The Liverpool-born MP and relatives' groups will monitor an investigation into who was behind inflammatory and offensive changes about the 1989 tragedy on the website Wikipedia.
The Liverpool Echo revealed that computers on a secure government network were used to make the amendments.
The newspaper said revisions to the online encyclopaedia began five years ago on the 20th anniversary of the tragedy, and again in 2012.
Among the changes to the Hillsborough section was an insertion saying "Blame Liverpool fans", and two years ago the phrase "You'll never walk alone" was altered to "You'll never walk again" and later "You'll never w*** alone."
The Cabinet Office warned it may not be possible to identify those responsible, saying the passage of time and the number of people using the Whitehall intranet would make finding them "challenging".
But Mr Burnham, MP for Leigh and shadow health secretary, said he would not accept "fudges".
He told the Echo: "There's no party politics in this, there never has been, it's way beyond that. As I've said before, the families have been let down by all sides over the years and now nothing must be allowed to set things back.
"We need these individuals named and they need to be held to account. It's unacceptable for a civil servant, a rogue civil servant probably, to have behaved in this way, if that's what the inquiry finds.
"The Government offered for me to be involved and I'm willing to take part. As ever, my main concern will be the families, their welfare and having right done by them.
"I'm not going to let anything stand in the way of that. I won't accept second best and I won't accept fudges, my objective is to find out who did this and for them to be held to account."
The Cabinet Office said an investigation had begun, led by Permanent Secretary Richard Heaton, and that the matter was being treated with "utmost seriousness".
It said "important stakeholders" including the Hillsborough Family Support Group, the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, the All Party Parliamentary Group on the Hillsborough Disaster and Mr Burnham would be kept updated of any findings.
A spokeswoman said: " The amendments made to Wikipedia are sickening. The behaviour is in complete contravention of the Civil Service Code. It is entirely unacceptable."
She added: "At this time, we have no reason to suspect that the Hillsborough edits involve any particular department, nor more than one or two individuals in 2009 and 2012.
"As the first incident happened five years ago and there are hundreds of thousands of people on the Government's network, it may prove challenging to identify who was involved. But we are exhausting every option. Anyone with information should contact the Cabinet Office.
"No one should be in any doubt of the Government's position regarding the Hillsborough disaster and its support for the families of the 96 victims and all those affected by the tragedy."
The Echo claimed the entries were made from IP addresses used by computers in government departments, including the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the Treasury and the Office of the Solicitor General.
Further changes included altering the description of a statue of Liverpool's renowned former manager Bill Shankly on the Anfield Wikipedia page from "He made the people happy" to "He made a wonderful lemon drizzle cake".
A government computer was also reportedly used to change the phrase "This is Anfield", which is on a sign in the players' tunnel at the club's stadium, to "This is a S***hole".
A description of the Hillsborough memorial at Anfield was also changed to include "nothing for the victims of the Heysel stadium disaster", referring to the match in Brussels, Belgium, in 1985, between Liverpool and Juventus at which 39 people died.
Margaret Aspinall, from the Hillsborough Family Support Group, told the Echo the revelations had been deeply upsetting, while Sheila Coleman, from the Hillsborough Justice Campaign, said it was "very saddening" that the changes came from within government.
Jon Davies, chief executive of Wikimedia UK, said the company was "appalled by such vandalism".
He said: "But our community have systems in place to deal with such incidents. In this case none of the offensive comments were up for more than a couple of hours, and most were removed within minutes."
New inquests are being held into the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans who were crushed to death during the April 1989 FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborough in Sheffield.
They were ordered after new evidence revealed by the Independent Panel Report led to the quashing of the original 1991 inquest verdicts in the High Court in 2012.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/burnham-vows-hillsborough-slur-hunt-015031696.html
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