Former UK PM Johnson denies he wanted to let COVID 'rip'
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[December 07, 2023]
By Sarah Young
LONDON (Reuters) -Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Britain's
COVID inquiry on Thursday that any suggestion he wanted to allow the
virus to "let rip" was "rubbish" and "completely wrong".
Johnson, prime minister between 2019 and 2022, faced a second day of
questioning which examined the weeks before the country's second
national lockdown in November 2020.
Asked whether he had wanted to allow the virus to "let rip", and about
suggestions that he believed older people had reached their time,
Johnson said: "No, no, no, this is all rubbish".
The inquiry has heard evidence from former advisers that Johnson,
fearing the impact on the economy, had once replied "let the bodies pile
high" as he wanted to let the virus spread rather than order another
lockdown.
He dismissed that evidence as "accounts...culled from people's jottings"
and said Britain went into a second lockdown as soon as the disease
picked up again.
"The implication that you're trying to draw from those conversations is
completely wrong," he said. "My position was that we had to save human
life at all ages and that was the objective of the strategy, and by the
way, that is what we did."
Coronavirus killed more than 230,000 people in Britain and infected many
millions more.
Johnson resigned in disgrace after a series of scandals including
reports that he, and other officials, engaged in alcohol-fuelled
gatherings in Downing Street in 2020 and 2021, when most Britons had to
stay at home.
Asked about what has become known as the "partygate" scandal, he said
there had been some mischaracterization of events at No.10, but added
that he was sorry.
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Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gives evidence at the
COVID-19 Inquiry, in London, Britain, December 7, 2023 in this
screen grab obtained from a handout video. UK Covid-19
Inquiry/Handout via REUTERS
"I apologize for the offence that has been caused and if I had my
time again of course I'd have done things differently," he said.
The inquiry has heard damaging testimony about a toxic culture in
Downing Street during the pandemic, Johnson's reluctance to lock
down, and how he was confused by the science of the virus.
In autumn 2020, he said the phrase "let it rip" was in common
parlance.
His job, he said, was to challenge the consensus in meetings and ask
questions of scientists recommending a full lockdown instead of a
policy of shielding vulnerable people and allowing the virus to
"rip" among the rest of the population.
"It does not do justice to what we did, our thoughts, our feelings,
my thoughts, my feelings, to say that we were remotely reconciled to
fatalities across the country or that I believed that it was
acceptable to let it rip," he said.
On Wednesday, he apologized at the inquiry for his handling of the
crisis, saying his government had initially been too complacent and
"vastly underestimated" the risks.
(Reporting by Sarah Young and William Schomberg, Editing by Timothy
Heritage and Angus MacSwan)
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