The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Queen marks Commonweal­th’s family of nations

Advocate Laura Wray

- By Norman Silvester news@sundaypost.com

The Queen has been photograph­ed with a backdrop of Commonweal­th flags as she celebrates the family of nations.

The image was taken during the filming of a special BBC programme featuring the royal family being screened today to mark Commonweal­th Day.

The Queen was photograph­ed in St George’s Hall at Windsor Castle wearing a delphinium blue dress and jacket of silk and wool cloque by Angela Kelly. On her left shoulder the head of state wears a chrysanthe­mum brooch, made from sapphires and diamonds set in platinum.

The Queen was pictured wearing the brooch when she was photograph­ed with the Duke of Edinburgh to mark their 73rd wedding anniversar­y in November. She also wore the brooch on her honeymoon in 1947, and again in pictures released to mark the couple’s 60th wedding anniversar­y.

Speaking on the BBC programme, Prince Charles pays tribute to the “extraordin­ary determinat­ion, courage and creativity” of the Commonweal­th’s people during the Covid crisis.

A leading advocate is calling for young Scots with special needs to be vaccinated as a priority.

Laura Wray’s 22-year-old son, Frankie Wray, is blind and unable to walk, talk or feed himself but, because of his age, she has no idea when he will get his first Covid jab.

Frankie has been diagnosed with a rare chromosome abnormalit­y called coffinsiri­s syndrome, meaning he is also vulnerable to any kind of infection.

Wray, the widow of former Labour MP Jimmy Wray, says if Frankie were to contract Covid he would almost certainly die. Because of his condition, he is also unable to receive a Covid test, unless it is given under anaestheti­c.

She says parents with special needs children, like Frankie, feel they have been failed by the Scottish government’s vaccinatio­n programme.

He currently lives in a residentia­l home in Liberton, Edinburgh run by the Sight Scotland charity where he receives expert round-theclock care.

Wray believes young people with severe disabiliti­es like Frankie should be a priority in the vaccinatio­n programme.

The 59-year-old lawyer, who specialise­s in personal injury cases, has not seen her son since Christmas Eve because of lockdown restrictio­ns.

She added: “People like Frankie are among the most vulnerable people in our society.

“My son is profoundly physically and mentally disabled and needs constant care. He has severe and complex learning difficulti­es and is unable to speak or communicat­e effectivel­y. “His sight has deteriorat­ed since he was 13 and he is now registered as blind. However he does not appear to be on any kind of priority list for a vaccinatio­n.

“There are hundreds of other children like him in the same situation. I would ask the Scottish government to prioritise vaccinatio­ns for people like my son as soon as possible.”

Jimmy Wray, who was MP

for Glasgow Bailliesto­n for 18 years, died in May, 2013, at the age of 78 from bowel cancer. The couple married in 1999 at the Palace of Westminste­r when boxing promoter Frank Warren was the MP’S best man.

Wray suffered a stroke in 2004 and although separating five years later, they remained friends right up to his death. At the time, she described her husband who was from Glasgow’s Gorbals as “a lion of a man”.

Wray who got her Covid vaccinatio­n last Friday, added: “I don’t think it’s right that I have had a jab and Frankie hasn’t. I would have gladly given Frankie my vaccinatio­n if it had been possible.

“Young people like my son are falling through the cracks in the system. They all have huge underlying health problems and vulnerabil­ities. We have contacted the relevant authoritie­s, but no one is able to say when Frankie might finally get his jab.”

Last month Inspector Rebus author Ian Rankin talked about the difficulti­es getting the jab for his 26-year-old son, Kit, who has special needs and said he also felt let down by the programme.

Rankin said that Kit, had been “forgotten” as vaccines were delivered to care homes. The author told the BBC he believed that those in Kit’s circumstan­ces “should have been prioritise­d”.

Kit, 26, who lives in care in Edinburgh, received his vaccine on Wednesday.

Radio presenter Jo Whiley also spoke out, saying she was “living a nightmare” after being offered a Covid jab before her disabled sister. The Radio 2 host, 55, said that she would give up her vaccine “in a heartbeat” to protect care home resident Frances. Hours after Whiley’s emotional plea, she found out her sister, 53, had caught the virus – in what she described as “like a plot twist from a terrible film”. She added that her “worst fears had been realised”.

Mark O’donnell, chief executive of Sight Scotland, said: “We believe young people with visual impairment and complex needs, including learning disability, should be prioritise­d for vaccinatio­n. “Our view is that the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on should have given priority to these young people at an earlier point.

“We would therefore share the concern of any parent of a young person in this category who has still to be vaccinated.” The Scottish government said: “People aged 16 and above who have learning difficulti­es and certain underlying health conditions are part of cohort six for vaccinatio­ns and should be receiving their invites over the next few weeks. “Where people in this group are living in long-stay nursing and residentia­l care homes, the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on recommends that everyone living in the same home is vaccinated to prevent the risk of exposure.”

People like my son are falling through the cracks in the system

– Laura Wray

 ??  ?? The Queen with the Commonweal­th flags
The Queen with the Commonweal­th flags
 ??  ?? Frankie Wray, Laura’s son
Frankie Wray, Laura’s son
 ??  ??

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