The former chief medical officer described a “car crash” meeting with Michael Gove as he appeared to try to change policy around decontamination days after teh Skripals were poisoned.
In an email chain shown to the Dawn Sturgess Inquiry on November 11, Professor Dame Sally Davies had contacted the then-cabinet secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood on March 15, 2018, days after Sergei and Yulia Skripal were poisoned in Salisbury.
READ MORE: Decision to search Skripals’ home ‘still haunts me’, says detective
In an email sent to Sir Jeremy, Dame Sally said: “Generally I believe we are doing a good job and all pulling together effectively, but I am concerned that today, Thursday, the process went wrong and I feel you should be aware.”
She said of a ministerial meeting on recovery which was to focus on decontamination, chaired by then-environment secretary Mr Gove, “it became quickly clear that SoS (secretary of state) had not been briefed”.
She added: “But importantly he did not accept that, while the national role for decontamination is to give guidance and check plans, it is for the LA (local authority), in partnership with local actors and Defra (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) to implement and deliver.
“He repeatedly said he wanted a new system where there was an accountable national leader for him doing it all.”
Dame Sally went on to say Mr Gove’s team “handled it really well, explaining about using the system developed over time, that has been tried and tested, that local people can see, feel and relate to”.
She then said Mr Gove “refused to accept” and the meeting “became a car crash”, adding “if it was not so important it would be a farce”.
Asked by Jesse Nicholls, counsel for Ms Sturgess’s family, what she meant by that, Dame Sally told the inquiry: “It’s rarely successful to make up new processes and policy in the middle of an emergency.
“He appeared, because he had not had a briefing, to want to do that and, as it played out, it was worrying.”
The email chain was later forwarded on by Sir Jeremy, who died in November 2018 after retiring on health grounds, to someone whose name has been redacted, with him adding: “A bit worrying…”
Sir Jeremy also replied to someone whose name is redacted, saying: “This man cannot be put in charge of anything…”
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