"You give my mum palliative care medicines and I'll get you charged with murder"
Midazolam use being uncovered in the Scottish Covid Inquiry but not in the English one. Why?
By Oliver May
THE Scottish Covid Inquiry appears to be doing the job its English counterpart cannot with more testimony about Care Home residents testing positive for Covid being put on end-of-life drugs without their family’s knowledge.
The Government’s protocol for doctors at the time was that, should any person test positive for Covid before or after they passed away, Covid should be put on their death certificate and recorded as such.
It is not known how many of those people would have survived had these end-of-life ‘care’ protocols not been used.
News Uncut is including two clips from recent testimony at the Scottish Covid Inquiry. This first one is from Micheleine Kaine, who is being questioned by KC Stuart Gale:
Here is another from Gilliant Grant:
Journalist Jacqui Deevoy, who has done extensive work on the Midazolam story, including writing for News Uncut, tweeted: “I’ve pitched the euthanasia story again today to the Telegraph and to the Express. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve contacted news editors about it over the last three years.”
Further reading:
"Midazolam, morphine and syringe drivers are critical to a good death..."
By Jacqui Deevoy WITH what we know now, these few sentences spoken by Dr Luke Evans MP to former Health Secretary Matt Hancock in a House of Commons conversation on April 17 2020 will send shivers down your spine: “A good death needs three things. It needs equipment, it needs medication and it needs the staff to administer it.”
What the government did was unforgivable.