Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said it was “a day of shame for the British state” as he delivered the first official apology to ...
An infected blood scandal in Britain was no accident but the fault of doctors and a succession of governments that led to ...
The infected blood scandal is not unique to the UK. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s many other countries also passed along contaminated blood to thousands of unsuspecting people. But in most of those ...
The prime minister has called the findings of the inquiry into the infected blood scandal a “day of national shame”, as he ...
The government is expected to apologise on Monday as an inquiry publishes a final report into the UK’s infected blood scandal.
The PM begins by telling the Commons that "this is a day of shame for the British state". He says the blood inquiry report reveals a "decade-long moral failure" from the NHS to the Civil Service, from ...
RISHI Sunak has said the infected blood scandal should “shake our nation to its core” as he delivered an historic government ...
Patients are continuing to die following a cover-up of the infected blood scandal across the political and medical system ...
A former Supreme Court justice has said it is “certainly conceivable” that politicians and officials could be prosecuted over ...
Over 30,000 people in the UK were found to have been infected with HIV and Hepatitis C after being given contaminated blood ...
Government apologises for 'decades-long moral failure' and promises £10bn compensation but true accountability may take far ...
Rishi Sunak declared Monday a “day of shame for the British state” as he apologised for the failures of successive ...