UK health minister says ex-PM aide's COVID-19 lies claim are untrue
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[May 27, 2021]
By Michael Holden and William James
LONDON (Reuters) -British health minister
Matt Hancock said on Thursday "unsubstantiated allegations" from the
prime minister's former chief aide that he had lied to colleagues and
the public about the government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic were
untrue.
Dominic Cummings, who was Prime Minister Boris Johnson's right hand man
until late last year, delivered a withering attack on his former boss
and Hancock during seven hours of testimony before a parliamentary
committee on Wednesday, saying their ineptitude led to tens of thousands
of unnecessary deaths.
Johnson, Cummings said, was unfit for his role, while his greatest
criticism was reserved for Hancock who he said had repeatedly lied to
such an extent that the country's top civil servant lost confidence in
his honesty.

"These allegations that were put yesterday ... are serious allegations
and I welcome the opportunity ... to put formally on the record that
these unsubstantiated allegations around honesty are not true, and that
I've been straight with people in public and in private throughout,"
Hancock told parliament.
With almost 128,000 deaths, the United Kingdom has the world's fifth
highest official COVID-19 toll, far higher than the government's initial
worst-case estimates of 20,000.
One of the most damning allegations from Cummings was that Hancock's
statement that the government had thrown a "protective ring around" care
homes at the start of the pandemic was nonsense, and that instead people
had been sent back from hospital who had contracted the coronavirus.
The opposition Labour Party says if he had lied, he should lose his job.
"I've been straight with people in public and in
private throughout," Hancock said. "Every day since I began working on
the response to this pandemic last January, I've got up each morning and
asked, 'what must I do to protect life'. That is the job of a health
secretary in a pandemic."
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Britain's Health Secretary Matt Hancock leaves his house, in London,
Britain May 27, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville

Lawmakers from the governing Conservative Party rallied around
Hancock, while Jeremy Hunt, a co-chairman of the committee at which
Cummings had appeared, said the allegations from the former aide
should be treated as unproven until evidence was provided to back
them up.
Hancock is also due to face questioning from media at a news
conference later.
Johnson told parliament on Wednesday nobody could credibly accuse
him or his government of complacency, and that the government had
always sought to minimise loss of life.
"I think it is (wrong)," housing minister Robert Jenrick told BBC
radio when asked about the allegation from Cummings that tens of
thousands of people had died unnecessarily.
"Nobody could doubt for one moment that the prime minister was doing
anything other than acting with the best of motives with the
information and the advice that was available to him."
(Reporting by Michael Holden and William James, editing by Elizabeth
Piper)
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