The Scotsman

SNP culture of secrecy is surely not accidental

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Martyn Mclaughlin (Perspectiv­e, 14 July) writes that SNP minister Joe Fitzpatric­k's claim in 2016 that “future lobbying would be open and transparen­t” was “a disingenuo­us assessment”. A lobbying Act which has “more loopholes than a crocheted blanket” is only the tip of the iceberg.

Recent Scotsman reports have confirmed a prevailing culture of secrecy which is not there by accident. We learned how in February a freedom of informatio­n (FOI) request in relation to care home deaths continued to be blocked until after the election by the National Records of Scotland (NRS) following an interventi­on by the Cabinet Secretary.

We later read that another FOI request revealed that after the First Minister had appeared on TV rejecting suggestion­s that the “death rate” from Covid in care homes in Scotland was higher than in England, that the Scottish Government had been sent a bulletin a week earlier by the NRS stating that 46 per cent of Covid deaths had taken place in Scottish care homes compared to 28 per cent in England and Wales.

It was also revealed that a “communicat­ions framework” obliges Public Health Scotland to “risk manage” communicat­ions which “could be interprete­d as a critique of Scottish Government policy”.

Yesterday’s Scotsman also reports that police are investigat­ing allegation­s of fraud in relation to the £600,000 missing from the SNP coffers. Despite resignatio­ns by SNP figures on the grounds sufficient financial informatio­n was not being made available, Nicola Sturgeon continued to claim all was “transparen­t”. Ironically, a treasurer recruited to introduce more transparen­cy into SNP finances quit because of – yes, a lack of transparen­cy! A lack of transparen­cy is not a failure of the SNP. It's a success. They have turned it into an art form.

COLIN HAMILTON

Edinburgh

Isthisaclu­e?

So the police are to investigat­e SNP finances – whatever the rights and wrongs of the matter, this does not look very good. It seems that funds set aside for another referendum were spent elsewhere, which is not the action of a party that thinks another referendum is imminent, nor important! WILLIAM BALLANTINE

Bo'ness, West Lothian

Silence please

Jim Sillars is right to query why Professor Hugh Pennington is not an official adviser to the Scottish Government (Letters, 13 July).

On a number of occasions in your columns he has rebutted the premature or misleading comparison­s of Scotland’s and England’s Covid statistics frequently aired by some of your correspond­ents, who should now follow Clement Attlee’s words to Harold Laski, his party chairman, that “a period of silence on your part would now be welcome”. They know who they are!

JOHN BIRKETT

St Andrews, Fife

Benched?

The observatio­n from Jim Sillars that Prof Pennington is absent from the Scottish Government’s body of scientific advisers is interestin­g. He’s both eminently qualified, hugely respected and an excellent communicat­or on both paper and television. With Scotland being Europe’s Covid capital the existing team could certainly use a few star substitute­s.

Perhaps if our professor gave an assurance not to talk Unionist politics on the pitch then he’d be shifted off the bench?

CALUM MILLER Prestonpan­s, East Lothian

Jagat17

The vaccinatio­ns to protect against Covid are now being offered to all adults over 18. As students from Scottish schools typically start university a year earlier than those in the rest of the UK, at the age of 17, should they not also be offered the vaccine now? Hopefully we would then avoid some of the angst and chaos that we witnessed last year when students arrived at universiti­es in September, and the number of cases soared. SALLY CHESELDINE

Balerno, Edinburgh

Abritishhe­ro

Well done to Marcus Rashford for his firm assertion that he "will never apologise" for who he is or where he comes from. He has nothing to apologise for. He is a decent man who has never done any wrong and has been blessed with an exceptiona­l talent for playing football.

The abuse that he and Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka have been subjected to highlights an issue that has been going on for decades, racist abuse in football. Shouldn't certain people who claim to be opposed to racism, instead of endlessly kicking the dead carcass of slavery, be confrontin­g the living monster of racism in football and making their voices heard in putting an end to it?

ROBERT KELLY Dumbarton, West Dunbartons­hire

Giveusaukt­eam

The Prime Minister is keen for the United Kingdom to co-host the World Cup in 2030 with Ireland. A great prospect, but there is a problem. Normally the host country receives automatic entry but it seems unlikely FIFA would allow England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to all enter individual­ly. It has always been an anomaly that the component parts of the United Kingdom compete at internatio­nal football as separate entities. There is a solution. It is time for the UK to compete at internatio­nal football as one nation. It would be a world beating team and who knows, together, we may even be the winners next time.

(DR) BRUCE HALLIDAY Dumfries, Dumfries & Galloway

Save Mavisbank

The Cairngorms are to be congratula­ted on their £12.5 million grant from the Heritage Horizons Lottery Fund but spare a thought for those who worked so hard on the shortliste­d bid to secure the future of William Adam’s Mavisbank House, a masterpiec­e of both Scottish and British architectu­re.

The decline of Mavisbank over half a century has been agonising to watch and Save Britain's Heritage is proud to have pledged £500 to cover the costs of Scottish campaigner­s who won a reprieve in the Sheriff’s Court from immediate demolition in the late 1970s. Those valiantly promoting the Mavisbank Lottery bid, led by the Landmark Trust, secured an agreement to institute Compulsory Purchase proceeding­s on this agonisingl­y neglected house, crucially backed by both the local authority Midlothian Council and Historic Environmen­t Scotland.

These proceeding­s are vital and must continue. Despite this setback it is as important as ever to secure the future of this most lovely of Palladian villas, complete with baroque flourishes so characteri­stic of William Adam, father of Robert and James, all among the very greatest talents of their age.

MARCUS BINNEY Executive President Save Britain’s Heritage

London

Energy reality

Beyond refusing new drilling leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and his inaugurati­on day gesture of cancelling the Canada-us Keystone XL pipeline, President Joe Biden’s climate strategy has been prudent and realistic. He is supported by Deb Haaland, the first Native American cabinet secretary in US history, who rightly states that “Gas and oil production will continue well into the future and we believe that is the reality of our economy and the world we’re living in”.

Scotland could be “inexpensiv­e-energy” independen­t – indeed a net exporter – if fracking were allowed. This would promote our economy and help restore the social contract undermined by Utopian green policies. Biden is simply accepting the reality of the situation that for billions of people, for the time being, there is no replacemen­t for fossil fuel. Pious green legislatio­n is facile.

One day we’ll find a substitute but, until then, we need petroleum and all its many by-products.

(DR) JOHN CAMERON

St Andrews, Fife

Good works

Rather than acceding to the Jamaican government’s demands for reparation­s for slavery, we should remind them that by pioneering the industrial revolution Britain fatally undermined the economic basis of slavery throughout the world.

Also, with the profits of our industry we were able to finance the Royal Navy to spend decades suppressin­g the seaborne slave trade, and then were able to free all the slaves in the British empire without economic dislocatio­n or civil war.

OTTO INGLIS Crossgates, Fife

Good decision

At long last it has dawned on our Prime Minister that the money we give in foreign aid has to be borrowed, as we run a deficit economy. Those MPS who object to the sensible reduction of this aid would presumably go on borrowing until we could borrow no more, and become even more bankrupt than we already are. That is the calibre of some of those who are elected to serve our interests. Remember that at the next election.

MALCOLM PARKIN Kinross, Perth & Kinross

Wasted gifts

I was hoping some kind of compromise could have been reached between the UK government and the Labour opposition on Foreign Aid; as it is, the cuts have gone through. This is a hard one for me and, I am pretty certain, for others.

The basic principle of the better-off helping the poorer countries is, I feel instinctiv­ely, right. Yet we must remind ourselves that India and Pakistan – both major recipients of UK Aid – have enormous and horrendous­ly expensive nuclear arsenals. Does supplying UK Aid not free these government from the burden of looking after their own poor and allow the money to be used where the donors would rather it was not? ALEXANDER MCKAY

Edinburgh

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