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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Guy Faulconbridge and Kate Holton

UK's Johnson resists pandemic inquiry as hospitals likened to war zone

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson takes questions in parliament in London, Britain January 20, 2021 in this still image taken from a video. REUTERS/REUTERS TV

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson resisted calls for an inquiry into his government's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic on Wednesday as the country's death toll neared 100,000 and his chief scientist said hospitals were looking like war zones.

Johnson has been accused of reacting too slowly to the crisis, failing to supply sufficient protective equipment and bungling the testing system, although the United Kingdom has been swift to roll out a vaccine.

People queue to receive the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine, at the St Charles Centre for Health and Wellbeing in London, Britain, January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

The official death toll is 93,290 - Europe's worst figure and the world's fifth worst, after the United States, Brazil, India and Mexico. Deaths rose by another record daily number on Wednesday.

There have been calls for a public inquiry from some doctors and bereaved families into the management of the crisis.

Johnson last year said he would hold an inquiry when the time was right, but has not outlined when that will be. Speaking in parliament on Wednesday, he said: "The idea that we should now concentrate...vast state resources to an inquiry now, in the middle of the pandemic, does not seem sensible to me."

People wearing protective face masks walk past 'The World Turned Upside Down' sculpture by Mark Wallinger, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in London, Britain, January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

Ministers say that while they have not got everything right, they were making decisions at speed in the worst public health crisis for a century and that they have learned from mistakes and followed scientific advice.

As hospital admissions soared, the government's chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance, said there was enormous pressure on the National Health Service with doctors and nurses battling to give people sufficient care.

"It may not look like it when you go for a walk in the park, but when you go into a hospital, this is very, very bad at the moment with enormous pressure and in some cases it looks like a war zone in terms of the things that people are having to deal with," Vallance told Sky television.

A man walks along the South Bank with the Houses of Parliament in the background, amid the coronavirus disease outbreak (COVID-19) in London, Britain, January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

The British government reported a fresh record rise in deaths on Wednesday with 1,820 people dying within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test. Currently, 39,068 people are in hospital with COVID, 3,947 of them on ventilation.

The United Kingdom is currently under a lockdown, with bars and restaurants closed, only essential shops open, and restrictions on people's activities.

But Vallance - formerly head of research at GlaxoSmithKline and a professor of medicine at University College London - said that loosening the lockdown too soon would be a mistake.

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Secretary of State of the Home Department Priti Patel speaks to the media at Westminster, in London, Britain, January 18, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

"The lesson is every time you release it too quickly you get an upswing and you can see that right across the world."

(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge, Kate Holton, Alistair Smout and Andrew MacAskill, editing by Estelle Shirbon and Mark Heinrich)

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