Ruling adds to pressure for hepatitis C inquiry
Pressure has mounted on Scottish ministers after a senior judge ruled that authorities acted unlawfully by refusing an official investigation into the deaths of two patients who died after being infected with hepatitis C through NHS blood transfusions.
In an unprecedented move Lord Mackay of Drumadoon yesterday quashed the Lord Advocate’s decision not to hold fatal accident inquiries into the deaths of Eileen O’Hara, 72, and the Rev David Black, 66, who both died in 2003.
Lord Mackay’s judicial review findings, issued by the Court of Session in Edinburgh, said ministers and Scotland’s most senior law officer acted in a manner incompatible with their rights.
Last night the SNP administration was coming under pressure to honour a pre-election pledge to hold a public inquiry into people infected with hepatitis C and HIV from blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.
advertisementThe former Labour-led Scottish Executive had resisted calls for a public inquiry in 2006 from victims and families of some 4000 people in Scotland who were given contaminated blood.
Mrs O’Hara received blood transfusions in 1985 and 1991 and was later diagnosed with hepatitis C.
Mr Black was a haemophiliac who had a liver transplant and received blood transfusions in the 1980s. He died of liver cancer due to hepatitis C.
Yesterday’s ruling was welcomed by Mrs O’Hara’s family and other campaigners. The judicial review was raised by Roseleen Kennedy, one of Mrs O’Hara’s daughters, and Mr Black’s widow Jean.
At a press conference in Glasgow, Mrs Kennedy, 42, a schoolteacher from Scotstoun, Glasgow, said: “I am just delighted that at last we got an opportunity to find answers to some of the questions that we have had for many years.”
Solicitor-advocate Frank Maguire who campaigned on the families’ behalf for more than three years, said the £100,000 cost of the families’ legal action would be paid by the Scottish Government.
He said the families now wanted a full judicial inquiry by a Court of Session judge.
Philip Dolan, chairman of the Scottish Forum of the Haemophilia Society, which provided almost £50,000 for the legal fight, described the ruling as “great news”.
In his findings, Lord Mackay said both the Lord Advocate and ministers had flouted Article 2 of the European Convention of Human Rights which states that “everyone’s right to life shall be protected by law”.
The law says that when a person dies after hospital treatment, ministers are obliged to have in place a system capable of providing an effective investigation into the death.
Lord Mackay further ruled that the only way such an investigation into the death of Mrs O’Hara or Mr Black could be achieved would be if the authorities were to initiate a public inquiry.
Lord Mackay continued the cases until a further hearing to allow the Lord Advocate and ministers to decide what action they will take after the ruling. No date has been set for the hearing.
Health Minister Nicola Sturgeon said yesterday: “We will now study the judgment in detail and in discussion with the Lord Advocate will consider its wider implications.”
Dr Richard Simpson, Labour’s spokesperson on public health, said: “Labour supports the right of individual families to know the exact circumstances that led to the death of their loved ones.”
Ross Finnie, Liberal Democrats health spokesman, urged Ms Sturgeon to offer Lord Mackay the Scottish Government’s “absolute commitment” to hold an inquiry.
Scottish Conservative Party justice spokesman Bill Aitken said he felt it was inappropriate to comment ahead of further legal and judicial process being completed.
A Crown Office spokesman said the opinion of the Court of Session and Lord Mackay, in particular, had been noted and would be “carefully considered” before any decision was taken.