Covid inquiry turns to PPE deals and the 'VIP lane'

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Getty Images Two medical technicians are wearing PPE at Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow on April 22, 2020. Both are wearing blue, plastic aprons, surgical masks and visors. There is a sign behind them which says "bio-bin" and appears to be a place to deposit used medical equipment and PPE.Getty Images

The Covid public inquiry will start four weeks of hearings on Monday, looking into the purchase and distribution of billions of pounds' worth of medical equipment during the pandemic.

In total, it's thought £48bn was spent on personal protective equipment (PPE), the test-and-trace programme, hospital supplies and the vaccine rollout.

Nearly 10% of contracts were awarded to firms with a link to the Conservative government in power at the time, according to the organisation Transparency International.

Bereaved families have accused the inquiry of a "potential whitewash" after it emerged representatives of PPE suppliers will not be called upon to give evidence.

The 'VIP lane'

This fifth section of the inquiry will hear from 50 witnesses, expected to include law experts, civil servants, politicians and transparency campaigners.

Questioning will cover the value of contracts awarded to companies in the pandemic, spending controls, the prevalence of fraud and the steps taken to eliminate it.

The inquiry will also look in detail at the use of the so-called "VIP lane" – officially known as the high priority lane – to award government contracts.

Introduced in April 2020, the idea was to treat offers to supply PPE with greater urgency if they came with a recommendation from ministers, MPs, members of the House of Lords, or other senior officials.

At the time the government said there was a "desperate need" to protect health and social care staff, and it was argued swift action was required to secure PPE.

A National Audit Office report later found that up to the end of July 2020, about one in 10 suppliers in the high priority lane was awarded a contract, while the figure was less than one in 100 for other suppliers.

The government ordered more than 30m masks, gowns and other items of PPE during Covid, with contracts totalling £14.6bn.

This part of the inquiry will also look at the purchase of ventilators to help patients breathe, as well as millions of lateral flow and PCR tests.

Femi Akinnola and his son Lobby are pictured sitting by a fountain, looking into the camera. Femi is wearing a blue t-shirt while Lobby is sitting next to him, wearing a light grey sweatshirt.

Lobby's father, Femi - a 60-year-old regular gym-goer with no underlying health conditions - died of Covid in April 2020

Whitewash claims

Bereaved families have accused the inquiry of "protecting PPE suppliers from scrutiny", after it emerged the inquiry would not seek evidence from commercial firms involved in the contracts.

Lobby Akinnola, whose father Femi died in April 2020, said individual suppliers need to be held to account.

"If people are not called to give evidence, then how are we ever going to know what went wrong?" he asked.

"Covid cost the lives of nearly 250,000 people in the UK, and if we don't take every step we can to learn from mistakes, we are going to leave a weakness in our response."

A spokesman for the Covid inquiry said it did not need to hear evidence directly from PPE firms as the focus "is on how the government responded to suppliers' offers".

"Our role is not to pursue criminal investigations into individuals or suppliers – that is a matter for law enforcement," he said.

The inquiry also ruled in January that any sensitive evidence about PPE Medpro, the supplier linked to Baroness Michelle Mone and her husband Doug Barrowman, would be held in private to avoid prejudicing any criminal investigation.

The inquiry's chair, Baroness Hallett, has already taken evidence on other subjects including pandemic planning and political decision-making, the impact on the NHS and the vaccine rollout.

Future phases later this year will cover the care sector, test-and-trace, the impact on children, and the economy.

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