“Matt Hancock should be arrested for willful misconduct in public office,” reads British mainstream media The Telegraph – a powerful announcement. At its core, the numerous leaked WhatsApp messages from the former UK health secretary contain no new information, as critical citizens have known for years that their government has lied to them about Covid-19. However, the messages could represent critical evidence to advance the investigation of the corona crimes.
The politics of the Corona period was characterized by one thing above all: lies. The “lockdown files” published by the Telegraph clearly show this. This shows, for example, that the warnings about hospital overload in the UK were fictitious: WhatsApp messages revealed discussions about making the many free capacities available to French Covid patients. (German citizens should be familiar with this – here, too, warnings of an impending lack of beds alternated with news about patients flown in from abroad.) And that, when the collapse of the health system was the reason for the lockdown imposed at the time.
Allison Pearson has now published a very critical comment in the Telegraph, calling for harsh legal action against Hancock for his “willful misconduct in office”. The former health minister should be arrested, she says. And, citing NHS sources, notes that not only was the life of nursing home residents, their families and countless other people destroyed by the Corona measures, but that the health system only really collapsed as a result of the lockdowns and their aftermath.
Today for the first time a major mainstream media (The Telegraph) in a Western country (UK) called for arrest and prosecution of health minister (Matt Hancock) for his Covid crimes.
The first domino has fallen. pic.twitter.com/fwCJ8p1EzM
— Dr. Eli David (@DrEliDavid) March 7, 2023
The author concludes her comment as follows:
Are there grounds for prosecuting the former minister for misconduct in public office? Has Matt Hancock “willfully misconducted to such an extent as to betray public confidence in the incumbent without reasonable apology or justification”?
Some families of nursing home residents are preparing a private lawsuit against Hancock, I know. The prosecution must then decide whether it is in the public interest to proceed. The lockdown files should provide crucial evidence.
With the third anniversary of the lockdown approaching, the Rights for Residents campaign urged its members to post a picture of their loved one in happier times along with the three words that best describe them. (You can see these deeply moving photos here.) Mind you, before these elderly ladies and gentlemen were imprisoned without contact with a close relative or friend. You have been handed over to a living death designed by our mad Covid masters to ‘save lives’. What could ever justify such a crime against humanity?
Well, that’s what I call an urgent question.
The lockdown files are causing a stir far beyond Great Britain. Member of the EU Parliament Matt DeGraaff is also demanding consequences: he considers the fact that the lockdown files showed that the low mortality rate from Covid-19 was a problem for politicians to be a problem, because this would mean that people would not be able to get the vaccinations, to be another Evidence of “the biggest scandal of the century”. He also mentioned the panic paper from the German Ministry of the Interior in this context. He calls on the European Commission to answer to Parliament. If the EU Parliament does not exercise its control function, it is making itself an accomplice in this very scandal:
So far, there is still a long way to go worldwide from dealing with the corona crimes – but leaks such as the lockdown files are giving critical citizens and lawyers more and more ammunition. Once the dam has broken and the processes begin in a country, this is likely to trigger a chain reaction…