The Jewish Chronicle

Jewish lawyer leads calls for Covid inquiry

- BY ALEKS PHILLIPS

A JEWISH lawyer who represente­d families of the victims of the Hillsborou­gh disaster is leading the campaign for a public inquiry into the government’s handling of the coronaviru­s crisis.

Elkan Abrahamson, a solicitor at the Liverpool-based practice Jackson Lees, told the JC he hoped an inquiry would provide an “independen­t eye” to offer “less confrontat­ional and more constructi­ve” criticism of decisions the government is taking.

“Either the government is making wrong decisions and people are dying needlessly as a result, or they’re making right decisions, but they’ve lost the trust of the public — so their guidance is being ignored and people are dying needlessly as a result,” he said.

He added that he hoped the government accepted his call before the country had to face a second spike in infection, something which “they haven’t really given us a proper, detailed roadmap” for.

“Now they’ve got the experience, they should be able to produce a very detailed, cohesive plan if the figures start rising in particular areas.

“The more specific they can be and the more they can tell you in advance what the plans are, the greater the chance of carrying the public with them.”

Asked about the potential deaths caused by a lockdown-induced recession, Mr Abrahamson agreed it was the job of the government to perform the

They haven’t got a detailed roadmap to deal with a second spike’

“grim calculus” over which situation would result in more lives lost, but wanted to make sure that in future, important decisions — such as when children should return to school, and what restrictio­ns should be placed on air travel — were based on expert advice considered in a transparen­t way.

He said that the government had been “secretive” with their decision-making process — pointing to the initial decision to hide the names of those on the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage) panel. He said he “cannot see the need for such secrecy. This isn’t, I think, a case where the government can say there are security concerns.

While there will be a time in a few years to look at how the government has handled the crisis, that “takes up a lot of resources that could be better used elsewhere”, he said.

However, an inquiry could compel the government to preserve documentat­ion for that eventualit­y. There have been reports of senior government officials, including Boris Johnson, communicat­ing using the Signal app, which automatica­lly deletes messages after a given period.

Mr Abrahamson said he had been motivated to launch the campaign by the stories of “individual tragedies” which “can’t help but affect you”.

If the Prime Minister refused his request, he said he would consider challengin­g the decision with a judicial review.

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