The public inquiry into the Omagh bombing is set to hold its first hearing on Tuesday.
Its chairman Lord Alan Turnbull is likely to set out the inquiry’s direction during a day of proceedings in the County Tyrone town.
Twenty-nine people, including a woman expecting twins, were murdered in the Real IRA attack on 15 August 1998.
The inquiry will examine whether steps could have been taken to prevent the bombing, which was the the biggest single atrocity of the Troubles.
It was established last year, following a long legal battle by some victims’ families.
Michael Gallagher, whose son Aiden was one of those killed in the bombing, said the inquiry has been an “unbelievably long time coming” but said he hopes it will be ”the beginning of the end”.
“As a bereaved parent, I will be happy in the knowledge that I have done everything that I could to try and bring justice and truth,” he told BBC Radio Foyle’s North West Today programme.
Mr Gallagher said he expects the inquiry to last a couple of years due to the sheer amount of material to wade through and the number of witnesses to interview.
“We are just looking forward to the process starting and then we’ll know better how it’s going to work,” he said.
“It’ll just be interesting to see, as we move through this inquiry, what we discover and what will end up.
“We hold out the hope for truth -whether we get justice or not is another question.”
Public hearing
Bereaved families and survivors are likely to attend the public hearing at the Strule Arts Centre in the town.
It is described as a preliminary session to deal with procedural issues.
No witnesses will be called or evidence heard until next year.
Part of the inquiry’s remit will be to establish if security measures could have disrupted dissident activities in the run-up to the bombing.
It will also evaluate the intelligence picture.
But it is not its purpose to identify the individuals responsible.
The attack was mounted from the Republic of Ireland and the Irish government has promised to assist the inquiry.
However, it has rebuffed a call for a separate or joint public inquiry.
The South East Fermanagh Foundation (SEFF), a group which helps some Omagh victims, has questioned Dublin’s approach.
Its director, Kenny Donaldson, said: “The Irish government could pass legislation which would provide Lord Turnbull with the ability to hold inquiry sessions in Dublin.
“He could be afforded the power to compel witnesses, to summons them to attend and to produce documents.
“Neither the Taoiseach (Irish PM) nor the Tánaiste (Irish deputy PM) can enforce key individuals to do so.
“An inquiry into Omagh which fails to have the ability to compel and summons witnesses from both sides of our border will not achieve an honourable and just outcome.”
What was the 1998 Omagh bombing?
On 15 August 1998 – just months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement – a large car bomb exploded in the town’s main street during peak Saturday shopping.
More than 200 people are injured in the blast, and a further 29 people died as a result.
Among the deceased were three generations of the same family.
The three women from Augher, County Tyrone were a 65-year-old, her 30-year-old daughter, who was heavily pregnant, and her 18-month-old toddler.