Boris Johnson faces calls for inquiry into 'shocking failures' during UK coronavirus crisis

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been criticised for the way his government has handled the coronavirus outbreak and now could face an official inquiry.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing calls for an independent inquiry into the coronavirus crisis.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing calls for an independent inquiry into the coronavirus crisis. Source: Getty

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing a call for an inquiry into his government's handling of the coronavirus crisis after failing to fully explain partial death data, limited testing or the lack of equipment for hospitals.

The novel coronavirus outbreak, the worst health crisis since the 1918 influenza pandemic, has left governments across the world grappling with stressed populations, a stalled global economy and overloaded health services.

Mr Johnson initially refrained from approving the stringent controls that other European leaders imposed but he later closed down the country when projections showed a quarter of a million people could die in the United Kingdom.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock has tried to hose down concerns abut coronavirus death stats.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock has tried to hose down concerns abut coronavirus death stats. Source: AAP
Since the lockdown, though, the government has given conflicting explanations of why it failed to join a European Union ventilator scheme and admitted there have been problems getting health workers enough protective equipment.

"Once we are through this crisis, there will of course need to be an independent inquiry to officially review the government's response to the pandemic," Ed Davey, acting leader of the opposition Liberal Democrats, said in a statement.

"The inquiry must have the strongest possible powers given the shocking failures on protective equipment for staff and the slow response of the government."
Opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer has also said the government was slow to respond and that at some point the United Kingdom will have to look back at the crisis.

Mr Johnson battled grave COVID-19 complications in intensive care earlier this month. He has been recuperating but making some calls and holding some meetings.

The true extent of Britain's COVID-19 death toll was more than 40 per cent higher than the government's daily figures indicated as of April 10, according to official data that put the country on track to become among the worst-hit in Europe.
The latest hospital death data show 17,337 people had died after testing positive across the United Kingdom.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock told reporters that the 40 per cent gap between the daily data and the more comprehensive ONS data was "not an accurate representation of those figures".

On testing too, Britain is far behind some European peers such as Germany.

Mr Hancock has faced questions about a pledge to get to 100,000 tests per day done by the end of this month. So far just over 18,200 tests are being done per day.


Share
3 min read
Published 22 April 2020 7:10pm


Share this with family and friends