Scottish Daily Mail

MAIL FORCE SAVES VE DAY FOR HEROES

As millions pour in for PPE airlifts, veterans can celebrate 75th anniversar­y. . . thanks to delivery of new safety kit

- By Arthur Martin

THEY are the last of the valiant who fought for our freedom. But yesterday it was their turn to salute a new generation of heroes.

After weeks of being confined to their rooms in a home, a group of veterans can now celebrate VE Day together with their carers – thanks to Mail Force and the generosity of Daily Mail readers.

Vital protective kit supplied by the new charity will allow staff to safely put on a party on Friday to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the victory in Europe.

The veterans were particular­ly elated because it could be the last major anniversar­y of VE Day that they are part of.

They include 98-year-old Jim Hooper, a former staff sergeant in the Glider Pilot Regiment, who feared he would have to remember fallen comrades on his own in his room.

Mr Hooper, who fought in the Battle of Arnhem, said: ‘This really is first class. I’m very grateful to everyone who has donated money and all the efforts to get the equipment here.’

Mail Force – launched last week by the Mail and its partners to tackle the PPE shortage – is attracting an extraordin­ary response from

the public. Contributi­ons from Mail readers sailed past the £500,000 mark while philanthro­pist Sir Tom Hunter donated £100,000, taking the total raised to an incredible £5.1 million. In other developmen­ts yesterday:

The UK death toll rose by 315 to 28,446, just below Italy’s total;

Scotland’s Covid-19 death toll rose by 12 to 1,571;

Boris Johnson revealed his doctors had been prepared to announce his death and said at one point he ‘couldn’t see a way out’;

A new app to trace the ‘contacts’ of patients infected with coronaviru­s will be trialled on the Isle of Wight;

Patients being treated for coronaviru­s in intensive care units in Scotland fell below 100 for the first time since March.

Mr Hooper, a father-of-three who lost his sight in 2013, and about 20 other veterans will honour the fallen at the special VE Day lunch. Surrounded by bunting, they will eat sandwiches and sponge cake, and then sing Vera Lynn’s most memorable songs.

The care home in Brighton is run by Blind Veterans UK, a charity which supports former servicemen and woman who have lost their sight. Residents will receive a personal message from Sophie, Countess of Wessex, the charity’s patron, on Friday.

‘We now have effective protection from the coronaviru­s and I’m really looking forward to the occasion,’ Mr Hooper said. ‘I just hope I remember the words. I might even treat myself to a glass of wine.

‘The Battle of Arnhem was a calamity. Most of the division got wiped out. I’ve attended a great many remembranc­e services in Arnhem and this time those that died will be remembered at this home.’

Mr Hooper was one of the 35,000 troops who landed in occupied Holland in what was then the largest airborne operation in history. He landed a large gilder – carrying 28 soldiers and weapons – 60 miles behind enemy lines in September 1944.

He fought for two days as an infantryma­n before becoming one of 6,500 Allied soldiers to be captured. Mr Hooper spent four months in a prisoner of war camp in Poland before being ordered to march west to a camp in the German city of Luckenwald­e. Three months later, he escaped.

After the death of his wife Ann, he moved into the care home in 2018 and has enjoyed the camaraderi­e of fellow veterans.

Since the outbreak, four of the 32 residents at Mr Hooper’s home have died and six are in isolation after testing positive for coronaviru­s. Staff say the residents did not catch the virus in the home and have put stringent infection control measures in place to protect colleagues and other veterans.

Like many other care homes across the UK, the centre’s efforts to protect its residents has left it perilously short of PPE. Staff had three gowns left when Mail Force arrived with a consignmen­t of bodysuits and masks on Saturday.

Without the new PPE, carers would not be able to move safely between the isolated residents who have Covid-19 and those who are allowed out of their rooms for Friday’s party. Lesley Garven, manager of the home, said: ‘We’re extraordin­arily grateful for the donation from Mail Force. It’s made us breathe a sigh of relief.

‘For VE Day, like other days, we will be constantly having to change masks and aprons. But now we know that we have the rigorous protection that we need for our members who may have Covid-19... so a big thank you.’

After the first veteran contracted the virus in hospital, staff at the home had to work on the assumption that everyone else also had it, because they were unable to get everyone tested.

But this changed after the Government rolled out coronaviru­s testing facilities to all care home residents and staff.

Mrs Garven added: ‘It’s been very difficult to know if we had contagion within the centre because we haven’t had testing. For weeks we had no idea who had it and who did not.

‘It was an absolute nightmare and very difficult to manage.’

Despite the new extra supply of PPE, Mrs Garven said staff were taking no chances and will make sure residents are a safe distance from each other during the party.

Mail Force’s campaign began in earnest only last Tuesday night, when it flew an airliner packed with 20 tons of personal protective equipment from Shanghai to London. The £1million cargo filled the hold and cabin of the chartered airliner.

The 50,000 medical coveralls and 100,000 masks quickly cleared customs and went straight to an NHS distributi­on centre in the Midlands. After further checks, the first consignmen­ts were despatched to a hospital, an ambulance trust, a hospice and three care homes.

Thanks to the speed and scale of public support for Mail Force, plans are under way to bring in further airlifts of PPE.

Last night Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove said the Government was increasing the supply of PPE to key workers.

‘Those that died will be remembered’ ‘We breathed a sigh of relief’

 ??  ?? Tribute: Three versions of the £2 commemorat­ive coin released by the Royal Mint
They shall remember: Jim Hooper, 98, with
Tribute: Three versions of the £2 commemorat­ive coin released by the Royal Mint They shall remember: Jim Hooper, 98, with
 ??  ?? Welcome delivery: Centre manager Lesley Garven. Inset: Jim Hooper in 19
Welcome delivery: Centre manager Lesley Garven. Inset: Jim Hooper in 19

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