London, Jan 20 (Agency) As the United Kingdom’s COVID-19 death toll approaches 100,000, Home Secretary Priti Patel said on Wednesday that the numbers were horrendous but that it was not the time to look back at the government’s possible mismanagement of the crisis. The United Kingdom’s official death toll is 91,470 – Europe’s worst figure and the world’s fifth worst after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been criticised for reacting too slowly to the crisis, failing to supply sufficient protective equipment and for bungling the testing system, although the United Kingdom has been swift to roll out a vaccine. “Every single death is deeply tragic,” Patel told LBC when asked why the death toll was so large. “There’s no one factor as to why we have such a horrendous and tragic death rate.” “I don’t think this is the time to talk about mismanagement,” Patel said when asked by the BBC if the government had mismanaged the crisis. When pressed on the international comparisons of death tolls, Patel told LBC the data was “not comparable”.
British ministers say that while they have not got everything right, they were making decisions at speed in the worst public health crisis for a century and that they have learned from mistakes and followed scientific advice. There have been calls for a public inquiry from some doctors and bereaved families into the handling of the crisis, but Johnson has resisted this. Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser, told Sky: “We will have got some things right and some things wrong and we’ve learnt a lot as we’ve gone through this.” “The lesson is go earlier than you think you want to, go a bit harder than you think you want to, and go a bit broader than you think you want to in terms of applying the restrictions.”