Bereaved families vow to continue fight for justice as Covid inquiry evidence ends
Witness testimony at the UK Covid Inquiry comes to an end today
Bereaved families have vowed to keep fighting for justice in memory of their loved ones as the final witness testimony was heard in the UK Covid-19 Inquiry.
Wednesday afternoon heard the last of the evidence from those whose relatives died and was a described as a āmoment (which) belongs to many peopleā.
The Covid Bereaved Families for Justice (CBFFJ) campaign group said key among those are the āthousands bereaved by Covid across the country who came together and refused to be silentā.
Relatives gathered outside the inquiry hearing centre in London on Wednesday, holding photographs of loved ones ahead of a minute of silence in their memory.
What is the Covid inquiry looking at?
Hearings in the inquiryās 10th and final module, examining the pandemicās impact on society, are expected to conclude on Thursday with lawyersā closing statements.
The impact of lockdowns on domestic abuse victims, the homeless and bereaved unable to attend loved onesā funerals were among the issues examined as part of the inquiryās last section.
Matt Fowler, co-founder of CBFFJ UK and the first person to paint a heart on the National Covid Memorial Wall in London, pledged the groupās work will carry on.
Speaking outside the inquiry on Wednesday, he told those gathered: āOver the years, we have heard hundreds of hours of evidence, and although only two of 10 reports have been published so far, the inquiryās verdict on those in power during the pandemic has already been utterly damning.
āThousands of lives cut short because of government incompetence, chaos and callousness.
āThat is what this inquiry has exposed. And that truth is now on the public record.ā
What has the Covid inquiry found so far?
The inquiry was formally launched in July 2022 and a report published in November last year found chaos at the heart of government and a failure to take Covid-19 seriously cost 23,000 lives in the first wave of the pandemic.
Inquiry chairwoman Baroness Heather Hallettās report on the government response to Covid accused then-prime minister Boris Johnson of being too āoptimisticā in his outlook in the early months of 2020.
He presided over a ātoxicā culture in No 10 and regularly changed his mind, while Cabinet members including then-health secretary Matt Hancock plus key scientists all failed to act with the urgency needed to tackle the virus, her report concluded.
While public hearings are concluding this week, further reports will be published in the coming months from the inquiryās other modules. including on healthcare systems, vaccines and therapeutics, procurement, the care sector as well as the test, trace and isolate system.
Mr Fowler said future reports āwill give us a blueprint for saving livesā.
He added: āOur job now is to ensure the blueprint turns into action. Another crisis is inevitable. It is a question of when, not if, and despite more than five years having passed since the start of the pandemic, we are still not prepared.
āSo the Government must use the blueprint this inquiry provides to change the country for the better, to take brave, decisive, urgent action.ā
Campaigners said they will āpursue accountability for the deaths of our loved ones through every route available to usā and to āensure that the country continues to remember those we lost and the cost that the pandemic continues to exact on everyone, from the bereaved to those suffering with long Covidā.
Mr Fowler added: āWe will keep fighting for justice.ā
By the end of December the inquiry had spent just under £204 million including on setup, chairwoman and lawyer costs and holding public hearings in all four nations of the UK.
An inquiry spokesperson said: āThe inquiry has the broadest scope of any previous public inquiry. The most expensive part of the inquiryās work comes to an end in early March with the conclusion of its programme of public hearings.
āFocus then moves to writing the inquiryās remaining reports, five of which will be published this year and three in the first half of 2027. Its recommendations, if implemented swiftly and in full, will ensure that the UK is better prepared for when another pandemic strikes.
āOnly a fraction of the billions spent during the Covid-19 pandemic needs to be saved next time for this inquiry to have been worth it.ā