The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sturgeon strongly denies virus ‘cover-up’

First minister brands accusation­s ‘nonsense’ after it emerges details of February outbreak were not disclosed to public

- DEREK HEALEY dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

Nicola Sturgeon has dismissed claims of a “cover-up” after it emerged a coronaviru­s outbreak in Scotland in February was not disclosed to the public.

The first minister said it was “complete and utter nonsense” to suggest informatio­n had been hidden following revelation­s at least 25 people linked to a conference in Edinburgh for the sportswear brand Nike had contracted Covid-19.

A BBC Scotland Disclosure probe found more than 70 employees from around the world attended the conference at the Hilton Carlton Hotel on February 26 and 27, with eight Scots later falling ill from the virus.

The first laboratory confirmed case in Scotland was announced in March and involved an individual who had recently returned to Tayside after travelling.

Ms Sturgeon faced a grilling on the issue during her daily briefing in Edinburgh but insisted all appropriat­e steps were taken to protect public health and informatio­n was held back partly because of patient confidenti­ality.

The first minister said she only became aware of the outbreak when cases were confirmed around March 2, although she did not know the venue.

“Why would we have been trying to cover anything up?” she said. “I stood up here every single day to be as open and transparen­t with you, the public, as possible.

“I don’t know where that accusation comes from, but it sounds like highly politicise­d nonsense as well.”

Ms Sturgeon said Health Protection Scotland set up an incident management team when the virus transmissi­on became clear and contact tracing had been carried out.

She said she was satisfied all appropriat­e steps were taken following the outbreak and confirmed cases associated with the conference were reported in the normal daily figures.

However, questions have been raised about why mass gatherings were not banned until more than two weeks later, on March 16, and lockdown only introduced on March 23.

A report by a team of experts at Edinburgh University found 2,000 coronaviru­s deaths could have been prevented if Scotland had locked down two weeks earlier.

Labour MP Ian Murray claimed there had been a cover-up following the February outbreak and called for clear answers from the first minister.

“Nicola Sturgeon has failed to come clean on this cover-up,” he said.

“It is not acceptable to hide behind patient confidenti­ality.

“It’s not politicisi­ng anything to scrutinise the government on decisions being made on behalf of the public.”

The first minister insisted she did not put patient confidenti­ality above public health but said delegate lists may have been publicly available.

“To say that cases were associated with a particular event, you do run the risk of identifyin­g people,” she said. “But it is not the case that public health was not given the priority it should have had.”

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman later denied there was a “culture of secrecy” in the Scottish Government, after MSPs demanded to know why they had not been told about the outbreak.

“I don’t think anyone can accuse me, the first minister, or this government of not publishing the maximum amount of informatio­n we can,” she said.

“If we don’t publish it is because we are not confident about that informatio­n.”

Ms Sturgeon also used her daily briefing to announce a £50 million fund to help the social care sector, which she said is “under immense pressure”.

She said 1,912 patients have now died in Scotland after testing positive for coronaviru­s, up 50 from 1,862 on Monday. A total of 13,763 people have tested positive, Ms Sturgeon confirmed, a rise of 136 from 13,627 on Monday.

As of Monday night, 1,618 patients were in hospital with confirmed or suspected Covid-19, up 165 from 1,453 the previous day. Of these, 81 are in intensive care, a rise of one.

The first minister stressed the rise in cases is through patients suspected to have the virus, with confirmed cases actually down 14 overnight to 1,131.

Ms Sturgeon cautioned against “undue concern” about the rise in hospitals, adding that the issue is being looked into.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Nicola Sturgeon faced a grilling during her daily briefing in Edinburgh, but insisted all appropriat­e steps were taken to protect public health.
Picture: PA. Nicola Sturgeon faced a grilling during her daily briefing in Edinburgh, but insisted all appropriat­e steps were taken to protect public health.

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