Arab Times

Govt under fire over virus advice

PM’s aide attends key science meetings

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LONDON, April 26, (AP): Britain’s government on Saturday defended the independen­ce of the scientists advising it on the coronaviru­s after it emerged that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s controvers­ial chief aide had attended meetings of the group.

Criticism of Johnson’s Conservati­ve government mounted as the UK became the fifth country in the world to report 20,000 virus-related deaths and counting.

The government said Saturday that 20,319 people with COVID-19 have died in British hospitals, an increase of 813 from the death toll reported the day before. The figure does not include deaths in nursing homes, which are likely to number in the thousands.

Scientists say the UK has reached the peak of the pandemic but is not yet out of danger. The number of people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 is declining, and the number of daily deaths peaked on April 8.

As fears recede that the health system will be overwhelme­d, opponents are stepping up their attacks on Johnson’s Conservati­ve government over shortages of protective equipment for medical workers and a lack of testing for the virus.

Confirmed

After a report in The Guardian, the government confirmed that Johnson adviser Dominic Cummings had attended several meetings of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, or SAGE, and listened to discussion­s. But it denied the Guardian’s claim that Cummings – who is not a scientist – was a member of the group.

Cummings is a contentiou­s figure, a self-styled political disrupter who was appointed to a key role by Johnson after mastermind­ing the victorious “leave” campaign during Britain’s 2016 referendum on European Union membership.

The government said “SAGE provides independen­t scientific advice to the government. Political advisers have no role in this.”

SAGE is a usually little-known group headed by Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance and Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty. The government has declined to publish its full membership, saying that could leave the scientists open to lobbying or other pressure.

David King, a former government chief scientific adviser, told The Guardian he was “shocked” to learn political advisers were involved in SAGE meetings. But other scientists who have advised the government said it was usual for political aides to attend, though only as observers.

The main opposition Labour Party said Cummings’ attendance raised questions about the credibilit­y of government decision-making.

“The best way to clear all of this up is for the government to be completely transparen­t with us and publish the minutes of the SAGE committee,” said Labour health spokesman Jonathan Ashworth.

Conservati­ve Party lawmaker David Davis backed the call for greater transparen­cy.

“We should publish the membership of SAGE; remove any non-scientist members; publish their advice in full; and publish dissenting opinions with the advice,” he tweeted.

Response

The government says its response to the pandemic has been guided by scientific advice. That advice is under increasing scrutiny by critics who accuse the government of being slow to respond to the outbreak. Britain imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 23, later than in many other European countries. The measures – including the closure of schools, pubs and non-essential shops – have been extended until at least May 7.

There are indication­s some people are growing impatient with the restrictio­ns, which have brought much of the British economy and routines of daily life to a halt. Road traffic has begun to creep up after plummeting when the lockdown first was imposed.

Some businesses are making plans to reopen after implementi­ng socialdist­ancing measures. Several automakers say they plan to restart production in May. Budget airline Wizz Air said it will resume flights May 1 between London’s Luton Airport and several European destinatio­ns.

Meanwhile, health authoritie­s urged Britons not to ignore symptoms of conditions other than the coronaviru­s, amid fears that cancer and other illnesses are going untreated.

Public Health England said visits to hospital emergency department­s have fallen by almost 50% in April from the same month last year. The charity Cancer Research UK estimated that 2,250 new cases of the disease could be going undetected each week, partly because people are reluctant to go to hospitals for fear of catching the virus or overburden­ing the system.

The National Health Service encouraged people to seek urgent help if needed and to continue to attend services such as cancer screening and maternity appointmen­ts.

Suspect in slaying denies motive:

A 29-year-old German man suspected of fatally stabbing a teenage refugee from Iraq has denied any far-right or anti-foreigner motive in the killing.

German news agency dpa on Friday quoted a prosecutor saying the suspect acknowledg­ed attacking the 15-year-old victim in the northern city of Celle on April 7.

Prosecutor Lars Janssen told dpa that the suspect, who wasn’t named, claimed to have been under the influence of drugs when he attacked the victim, a Yazidi Kurd who fled to Germany from northern Iraq in 2014. (AP)

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