
Three-year-old Megan Bradley great grand niece of Bloody Sunday victim Jim Wray holds his photo as she joins other family members for a march towards the Guildhall Square for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, Jan 15th, 2010 in Derry, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. EPA/STRepa Three-year-old Megan Bradley great grand niece of Bloody Sunday victim Jim Wray holds his photo as she joins other family members for a march towards the Guildhall Square for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, Jan 15th, 2010 in Derry, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. EPA/STR

A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STRepa A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STR

A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STRepa A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STR

A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry in Derry, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. EPA/STRepa A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry in Derry, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. EPA/STR

A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STRepa A man walks past a Bloody Sunday mural in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland 15 June 2010 , on the day family and relatives await for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry . The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STR

Familles and friends of those who were killed on Bloody Sunday in 1972, pause in Waterloo Place before heading on towards the Guildhall Square for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, June 15th, 2010, in Derry City, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STRepa Familles and friends of those who were killed on Bloody Sunday in 1972, pause in Waterloo Place before heading on towards the Guildhall Square for the final outcome of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry, June 15th, 2010, in Derry City, Northern Ireland. The inquiry was set up to re-examine the deaths of 13 people killed when British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1972. The inquiry, led by Lord Saville, was announced in 1998 and cost about £195m. It became the longest-running inquiry in British legal history. The shootings were among the most controversial state killings in the Northern Ireland conflict. The Saville Report is expected to run to 10 volumes containing 5,000 pages. Photo/STR EPA/STR