LONDON (AP) – A public inquiry released Thursday slammed the U.K.’s initial response to the coronavirus pandemic in the early months of 2020 as “too little, too late,” saying the failure to lock down the country earlier “led to an unacceptable loss of life.”
‘Too little, too late:’ Former UK government slammed for its initial COVID-19 response
LONDON (AP) – A public inquiry released Thursday slammed the U.K.’s initial response to the coronavirus pandemic in the early months of 2020 as “too little, too late,” saying the failure to lock down the country earlier “led to an unacceptable loss of life.”
The inquiry, chaired by former judge Heather Hallett, found that chaos at the heart of the then Conservative government and a failure to take COVID-19 seriously potentially cost 23,000 lives in England alone the first wave of the pandemic.
Hallett’s report on the government response to COVID-19 – the second of four topics on the pandemic that she is assessing – found that the prime minister at the time, Boris Johnson, presided over a “toxic” culture in Downing Street and regularly changed his mind, while leading cabinet members as well as key scientists all failed to act with the urgency needed to tackle the virus.
After weeks of rising cases and days after most other European nations had gone into lockdown, Johnson announced a U.K.-wide lockdown on March 23, 2020, arguably the biggest decision of any British prime minister since the end of World War II.
