The Daily Telegraph

Poverty, conspiraci­es and ‘incompeten­t’ leaders blamed as virus runs rife in the Welsh Valleys

Labour administra­tion under fire with mortality rates in old mining areas among highest in country

- By Robert Mendick and Jamie Johnson

As Britain eyes an end to lockdown, one area is creating a particular headache for public health officials, scientists and politician­s – Wales, and especially the old mining communitie­s.

The country has proportion­ally almost twice the number of cases as the rest of the UK, while mortality rates in and around the Rhondda Valley have also been among the highest in the country.

Across Wales, the latest figures show 409 cases per 100,000 people, compared with 262 in England, 273 in Scotland and 247 in Northern Ireland. As of yesterday, Wales had lost 1,267 people to Covid-19 out of a population of just over three million. One sixth of the dead have come from Rhondda Cynon Taf, the county borough that covers the Rhondda Valley.

The latest figures show that Rhondda Cynon Taf ’s positive test rate is 610 cases per 100,000 of the population. In total, 1,466 people have tested positive in a population of 240,000 and 224 people have died. It has the highest mortality rate in Wales at 93.28 deaths per 100,000, and one of the highest in the UK. Chris Bryant, the Labour MP for the area, said: “Rhondda is the worst in the country. We are the worst, worst, worst.”

Only Barrow-in-furness, in Cumbria, another former mining community but with a much smaller population, has proportion­ally more cases – 823.7 positive tests per 100,000 people.

While London and parts of the South East of England contemplat­e life out of lockdown, much of Wales remains in the grip of the virus, the all-important transmissi­on rate thought to be only just below the magic R figure of one that arrests its exponentia­l growth. Many point to these communitie­s’ impoverish­ed, ageing population­s. A lot of the residents are former miners with lung conditions from years spent down the pits, who are particular­ly vulnerable.

But Mr Bryant, one of Labour’s most senior MPS, has accused a significan­t number of his constituen­ts of flouting the lockdown and spreading coronaviru­s because they falsely believe they have immunity after claiming to have caught it last year. He believes their “dangerous” claims are fuelling the spread of the virus.

In desperatio­n, Mr Bryant, a former minister, posted a video on Facebook last week pleading with locals in the Rhondda to ignore “a chunk of people talking b-------”.

Mr Bryant said in the video: “The conspiracy theories doing the rounds are beginning to do my head in.

“I have been told by one chap he didn’t need to abide by the social distancing rules because he knows for an absolute certain fact that he contracted coronaviru­s last summer and he knows lots of people who contracted coronaviru­s in November and December last year and therefore they are immune as well.”

Mr Bryant went on: “It is completely and utterly untrue and dangerous.”

Beneath his Facebook posting, a number of local residents insist they are maintainin­g social distancing rules, but at the same time are also convinced they caught Covid-19 last year. “Someone must know the truth of how long this was spreading before we were told,” posted one constituen­t, who claimed she contracted the virus in October after “becoming quite ill”.

The Welsh Valleys are also a victim, said Mr Bryant, of being tight-knit communitie­s, in which generation­s of families still live together, leaving older people susceptibl­e. Obesity rates are high and so too smoking, along with lung diseases contracted in the mines. Many inhabitant­s work in the social care sector or as bus drivers and have brought the disease back home with them, the MP said.

The tragedy that has hit this area was predicted almost two months ago by the Welsh First Minister. “We have an older, sicker population,” said Mark Drakeford on March 30. “Our history of coal mining and heavy industry means we have people with breathing problems that the coronaviru­s is particular­ly likely to affect.”

Critics have questioned why, if the Welsh Government knew that then, it did not put in place more testing and more shielding of the vulnerable population. In April, thousands of letters telling people they were clinically extremely vulnerable and should shield themselves were delivered to the wrong addresses, while a target of 5,000 tests a day was scrapped after Mr Drakeford admitted it “hadn’t turned out to be achievable”.

Locally, there are complaints that testing kits, lined up by the Welsh, were snaffled by Downing Street to use in England; such claims have fuelled a rise in Welsh nationalis­m.

Wales now has a higher proportion of hospital beds with mechanical ventilator­s occupied by coronaviru­s patients than any other region of the UK, according to a graph shown at the latest Downing Street press briefing.

One intensive care consultant at the Royal Glamorgan Hospital told BBC Wales: “In this area there’s a lot of poverty, deprivatio­n and chronic ill health – so those people, if they do catch Covid, are less likely to survive.”

Public Health Wales cautioned against making domestic comparison­s between Wales and the rest of the country. A spokesman said: “It’s very difficult to make effective comparison­s … as there are multiple factors involved, including demography, the overall health of the population and the prevalence of underlying health conditions, adherence to social distancing measures and access to testing, as well as socioecono­mic factors.”

Paul Davies, the leader of the Welsh Conservati­ves, accused the Labour-led administra­tion of failures as stark as those levelled at the UK Government.

“It’s absolutely astounding that the Welsh Government has sent shielding letters to the wrong people – not just once, but twice – and to be quite frank, the Labour government’s explanatio­n that it’s a processing error is simply not good enough,” he said.

“The administra­tive incompeten­ce of those trusted to contact patients has resulted in some people across Wales being at an increased risk of contractin­g the virus.”

‘It’s astounding that the government sent shielding letters to the wrong people, not once but twice’

 ??  ?? Miners after a shift in the Rhondda Valley in 1972. Many suffer from lung conditions
Miners after a shift in the Rhondda Valley in 1972. Many suffer from lung conditions

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