The Scotsman

Care home Covid victims deserve their own inquiry

- Conor Matchett Politics correspond­ent conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Transparen­cy remains one of the Scottish Government’s Achilles heels and the latest revelation raises further questions around its handling of Covid-19.

In The Scotsman today, we detail how the Scottish Government, with help from a minister – Fiona Hyslop – intervened at the last second in a process which could have seen detailed informatio­n about the scale of Covid-19 deaths in individual care homes made public as earlier as February.

As you will read, this interventi­on led directly to a u-turn from the NRS and a delay to its publicatio­n until late May, after the Holyrood election.

While there is no suggestion this was a direct considerat­ion of the NRS officials in question, the timing is worrisome and raises questions about ministeria­l and government interferen­ce in supposedly independen­t or non-ministeria­l agencies.

The failure to release this informatio­n prior to the election will be jumped on by opponents, but the real issue lies in the fact that there was no reason to keep it secret. No justificat­ion around personal informatio­n, no public health justificat­ion, and no public interest justificat­ion.

It simply should have been published when first requested in September 2020.

Such a decision would have offered families of victims full closure and added desperatel­y needed transparen­cy on an issue which was at the top of the political agenda throughout the first wave of Covid-19.

Instead it took a decision from the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er and an eight month delay to force the NRS’ hand.

The Scottish Government’s involvemen­t also raises the question of whether it is truly committed to transparen­cy. This isn’t a Scotland only problem, but this failure of openness on policy failures is endemic to the SNP.

These revelation­s today also reinforce the need for the shameful handling of care homes during the Covid-19 pandemic to be subject to a full, Scotland only public inquiry.

The victims of this pandemic deserve this as a minimum, but voters also deserve honesty .

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