The Inquiry
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | Spain |
---|---|
Directors | Giulio Base |
Budget | 8 million EUR (estimated) |
Composers | Andrea Morricone |
Story by | Ennio Flaiano |
Suso Cecchi d'Amico | |
Valerio Massimo Manfredi | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2320678 |
About The Inquiry
Roman Emperor Tiberius learns that a new kingdom is set to rise in the East following the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth. He sends his general Titus Valerius Taurus to investigate the matter.
Infected blood: Tory rebellion expected on payouts amendment
... The Inquiry heard that one person dies as a result of contaminated blood products every four days...
Boris Johnson to apologise to Covid Inquiry but say he got big calls right
... His evidence will follow weeks of heavy criticism of him at The Inquiry...
Covid inquiry: Some local leaders put politics ahead of public health, says Hancock
... More on Covid and the Covid InquiryOn his second day of evidence to The Inquiry, he was questioned on government decisions as Covid cases began rising in autumn 2020...
Covid inquiry: Toxic culture damaged response, says Matt Hancock
... During The Inquiry, Mr Hancock has been accused of being untruthful...
Dominic Raab denies Dominic Cummings made key pandemic decisions
... Mr Raab, who was then also foreign secretary and later served as deputy prime minister, told The Inquiry: " There is a whole circus that can be built up in the media and elsewhere around the internal battles between individuals, and some of that is natural and healthy...
Covid inquiry: Michael Gove defends Boris Johnson over lockdown decision-making
... Mr Gove was the first senior cabinet minister at the centre of the UK government s response to the pandemic to give evidence in this part of The Inquiry...
Excluding us from meetings harmed Covid response, mayors tell inquiry
... The Inquiry heard that his earlier requests to attend were rejected by No 10 on the grounds that other regional mayors would then need to be invited...
What is behind Alex Salmond's new legal fight with the Scottish government?
... The Inquiry saw people like Mr Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon give hours of evidence, and laid bare the problems in the government s attempts to defend the judicial review after legal advice was published...
Covid inquiry: Toxic culture damaged response, says Matt Hancock
By Kate WhannelPolitical reporter
Former Health Secretary Matt Hancock has denied lying to colleagues during the pandemic and criticised a " toxic culture" in government.
Addressing the Covid inquiry, Mr Hancock called Dominic Cummings , one of his harshest critics, a " malign actor".
He also said he had to " wake up Whitehall" to the Covid threat and that a lockdown should have been enacted three weeks earlier than it was.
During The Inquiry , Mr Hancock has been accused of being untruthful.
Helen MacNamara, a senior civil servant during the pandemic, said he would say things that would turn out not to be the case.
Sir Patrick Vallance , the former chief scientific adviser, Mr Hancock had " a habit of saying things which he didn't have a basis for".
In his evidence, Mr Hancock said there was no " evidence whatsoever" that he lied during the pandemic.
The Mid-Suffolk MP was health secretary between 2018 Until June 2021 when he was forced to resign
He was suspended as a Conservative MP, after appearing on ITV's " I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here" in 2022 and later said he would not stand for re-election as an MP.
More on Covid and the Covid Inquiry
In The Session , The Inquiry was shown extracts from Sir Patrick's diary which described a " massive internal mess" inside the health department and reported that then-civil service head Sir Mark Sedwill complained of The Department 's " clear lack of grip".
However, Mr Hancock robustly defended his role in the pandemic and that of the health department that he led.
" From The Middle of January, we were trying to effectively raise The Alarm , " He Said , adding: " We were trying to wake up Whitehall to the scale of The Problem . "
He argued it was having to do to work of other departments, for example on school closures.
" There was a great deal of Hard Work on our side and a toxic culture that we had to work with which seemed to want to find people to blame".
He added there was an " unhelpful" assumption that " when anything was difficult or a challenge, therefore there was somehow fault and blame".
He also referred to " a lack of generosity or empathy and understanding the difficulty of rising to such a big challenge".
Mr Cummings - who left No 10 in December 2020 after falling out with then Prime Minister Boris Johnson - has.
Offered a chance to respond, Mr Hancock blamed Mr Cummings for creating a bad atmosphere and described him as a " malign actor" who fostered a " culture of fear".
'Greatest regret'Mr Hancock was also questioned about apparently contradictory evidence on when the government knew people without symptoms could transmit The Virus .
Referring to a report by the US's Centre for Disease Control, He Said there was not clear evidence until The Beginning of April and up to then he had been advised not to base policy on the assumption that Transmission could be asymptomatic.
Mr Hancock said it was his " single greatest regret with hindsight" that he didn't overrule the advice.
" I was in the pro-let's worry about asymptomatic Transmission camp. The frustration was that, understandably from their point of view, and here I'm putting myself in their shoes, the Public Health England scientists said we have not got concrete evidence. "
The Inquiry was shown messages between Chief Medical Officer Sir Chris Whitty and Sir Patrick in which they suggest the government had known about asymptomatic Transmission .
as The Inquiry was going on, Mr Cummings said Mr Hancock was " talking rubbish".
'Not adequate'Mr Hancock was also pushed on when he advised Mr Johnson that Immediate Action would be needed to contained The Virus .
The former health secretary said he raised The Alarm bell on 13 March.
However, The Inquiry 's lawyer, Sir Hugo Keith KC, questioned The Statement noting that This Was not mentioned in the entry for 13 March in Mr Hancock's book, Pandemic Diaries.
Mr Hancock replied that The Evidence only came to light after his diary was published and cited an email he sent the Prime Minister calling for a " suppression strategy".
Sir Hugo argued that this did not amount to calling for an immediate lockdown.
Asked about the existence of pre-prepared plans for a pandemic, Mr Hancock said they existed but that they were not " adequate".
Mr Johnson will give evidence to The Inquiry on 6 and 7 December. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is also expected to give evidence before The End of the year.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com