Loved ones of Welsh Covid victims want voices heard as inquiry starts
A preliminary hearing will be held in London on Tuesday
Bereaved families are set to attend the first in-person hearing of the coronavirus inquiry, amid concerns that their testimonies may not be directly heard by the former judge heading the probe.
A preliminary procedural hearing will take place on Tuesday, with those who lost loved ones during the pandemic hoping for reassurance they will be able to share their stories with the inquiry directly.
There are fears they could be sidelined if they are only able to share their experiences through a Listening Project, which was established so members of the public can take part without formally giving evidence or attending a hearing.
This is due to begin later this year, with the inquiry expected to hold the first evidence hearings for its first module in late spring 2023.
In previous public inquiries, such as those concerning the Grenfell Tower fire and Manchester Arena bombing, family and friends provided "pen portraits" of victims at the start of the formal hearings.
Loved ones are hoping to find out whether they can be recognised as 'core participants' which means they'd be able to play a formal role in the inquiry.
Families in Wales who've lost loved ones to Covid have previously called for a Wales specific inquiry but the Welsh Government ruled it out saying a UK-wide look at the pandemic was the best way to look at the experiences of people from Wales.
According to its terms of reference, the Covid-19 inquiry will "listen to and consider carefully" the experiences of bereaved families and others affected by the pandemic.
It "will not consider in detail individual cases of harm or death", but "listening to these accounts will inform its understanding".
Members of the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group are seeking assurances that their stories will be directly heard by its chairwoman, Baroness Hallett.
Co-founder of the group Matt Fowler, whose father Ian died in hospital in April 2020, said: "I've been campaigning for the Covid inquiry for over two years now, after my dad's death and that's been with one goal: for lessons to be learnt from my loss that protects the lives of others in the future.
"Baroness Hallett herself has acknowledged that those lessons will only be possible if the experiences of the bereaved are listened to, and it's absolutely critical that she sets out her plans tomorrow for how she will hear our stories directly.
"Anything less would be devastating for families like mine who have worked so tirelessly to get here and could cost lives in the future."
The group is expected to be granted core participant status at the hearing on Tuesday.
Core participants are individuals, organisations or institutions with a specific interest in the inquiry, who can access relevant evidence, make opening and closing statements and suggest lines of questioning to inquiry counsel.
The inquiry will examine the response to the pandemic and its impact in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, provide a factual account of what happened, and identify lessons that can be learned.
On Tuesday, Lady Hallett will lead a minute of "silence and reflection to commemorate the far-reaching impact the pandemic had on everyone's lives".
Inquiry counsel will provide an update on who has been granted core participant status, and set out in more detail the plans for the first module.
This will consider the extent to which the risk of a pandemic was properly identified and planned for.
The preliminary hearing had been due to take place in September, but was postponed to respect the period of national mourning following the death of the Queen.