Chief medical officer voiced frustrations with Stormont politicians over Covid
It came amid disagreement around containing the coronavirus pandemic in autumn 2020.
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Northern Irelandās chief medical officer, Dr Michael McBride, blasted politicians as ādysfunctional bastardsā in 2020 at the height of the coronavirus pandemic.
Fractious exchanges at Stormont were detailed during the Covid-19 Inquiry during its first day of sitting in the region on Tuesday.
During her opening statement to the sitting of the inquiry in Belfast, Clair Dobbin KC, lead counsel to the inquiry, detailed a chronology of the political response to the pandemic.
She described evidence to the inquiry of ministers being in ādisarrayā as the coronavirus pandemic arrived in the region.
The Stormont Executive was reformed in January 2020 following a three-year political collapse and was contending with Brexit arrangements as well as playing catch-up after the break in devolved government.
At that stage, civil contingency measures had not been reviewed in 20 years.
Ms Dobbin said Northern Ireland had its first confirmed case of Covid-19 by the start of March, and the inquiry understands that the first āsubstantialā discussion around the virus at the Executive came on March 2.
On March 11, the Republic of Ireland introduced a package of measures, including the closure of schools.
On the following day, then-first minister Dame Arlene Foster and deputy first minister Michelle OāNeill met with the then-head of the civil service David Sterling, who told them there was no medical or scientific advice to support the measures announced by the Taoiseach.
The Executive met on March 16 when there were 45 cases of the virus in the region. Ms Dobbin said notes from that meeting indicate a āchangeā in attitude, and āobvious anxiety about what was taking placeā.
Ms OāNeill is recorded as saying āthey lost control two weeks agoā, while the communities minister āreferred to people being terrifiedā, and Justice Minister Naomi Long āreferred to the Executive giving mixed messagesā.
Ms Dobbin told the inquiry: āthere were references to ministers not being shouted downā, and Health Minster Robin Swann was said to have said they had been preparing for the past seven weeksā.
Ms Dobbin said a Whatsapp message from Mr Sterling on March 17 read: āThe Executive meeting yesterday was excruciating, no leadership on display at allā.
She said another Whatsapp from Mr Sterling said it should never be underestimated how difficult it is to get the simplest things agreed, and that some seem keener on āscoring points off each other than helping the citizensā.
On March 18, the Executive activated the Northern Ireland hub, described as the operation centre of the contingency arrangements.
The following day, March 19, saw the first death of a person in Northern Ireland with Covid-19.
Ms Dobbin also raised the attendance of Ms OāNeill and then-finance minister Conor Murphy at the funeral of senior republican Bobby Storey despite social distancing rules in force, noting that the incident appeared to prove damaging to relations within the Executive.
By October, Ms Dobbin described the situation in Northern Ireland as having become āreally seriousā following the relaxing of Covid restrictions in the summer, and said Dr McBride said he had ānever been as concerned than he was at that pointā, and urging the Executive it had only a short window of opportunity to take action.
It was recommended in October that a six-week ācircuit breakerā of restrictions were introduced to stem the number of cases.
Ms Dobbin a series of meetings from November 9, 10, 11 and 12, were āperhaps the most difficult in the Executive committee decision makingā.
Then-economy minister Diane Dodds was noted as saying she was distraught with the tone of the meetings and claimed ministers āwere not having an honest discussionā, and there were ātheatricsā and media leaks to āembarrassā the DUP, before Ms Long suggested the meeting adjourn to avoid risk damaging relations.
Senior official Dr Andrew McCormick described āthe most difficult Executive meeting he had ever witnessedā.
There were cross community votes on extending the circuit breakers after the DUP said there were concerns from the unionist community around lockdown measures.
Mr Swannās special adviser Mark Ovens described the meeting as tense, and said the largest Executive party, then the DUP, was āstruggling to grasp the need for action to be takenā.
During the opening statement of Peter Wilcock KC, acting for the Northern Ireland Covid Bereaved Families for Justice, he also touched on āpolitical dysfunctionā at Stormont.
He said it was ānot a criticism of any individual, political party or communityā, but āapplied to a number of people who should have known betterā.
He revealed that during autumn 2020, Dr McBride āused uncharacteristically coarse languageā in an exchange with Mr Swann to express his frustration with local politicians.
āDysfunctional bastards. How will we ever get through this with an enemy within,ā Mr Wilcock read to the inquiry during his opening statement.
āI have a good mind to walk off and leave them to it, as no doubt do you. But then those that really matter, those whom they seem to have forgotten they represent, are really depending on us.ā