THE Scottish LibDems have demanded Nicola Sturgeon delivers a personal statement in Holyrood on whether she deleted all WhatsApp messages relevant to the UK Covid Inquiry.

The former Scottish first minister clarified in a statement on Saturday that the inquiry does have messages from her relating to the pandemic.

She is due to give evidence to the probe, which is currently holding three weeks of hearings in Edinburgh, at the end of January. 

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Alex Cole-Hamilton,  the Scottish LibDems leader, accused Sturgeon of “deceiving” bereaved families after the inquiry was told on Friday that messages sent and received by the former SNP leader had been erased.

He has now reportedly written to Sturgeon to demand she face scrutiny in the Scottish Parliament.

Cole-Hamilton said the former first minister has to clarify whether she “misled bereaved families” and the UK Covid inquiry.

He said in a letter: “It is only right that you address these questions in a personal statement to the Scottish Parliament and face questions from MSPs in public.”

The National:

Cole-Hamilton added: “Lives and livelihoods hinged on decisions that you and your government were taking.

“By erasing the discussions that underpinned such decisions, however, you and others at the top of your government may have denied families the answers, the understanding and the closure that they have sought so desperately to obtain.

“Those grieving families, those failed, may be forever denied the full story behind the calls you made.”

Cole-Hamilton urged Sturgeon to also ensure MSPs can put questions to the former first minister following any statement.

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But on Saturday, Sturgeon wrote on Twitter/X that her informal messages had not been retained on her own devices but were later obtained and submitted to the inquiry last year, along with handwritten notes.

“Contrary to the impression given in some coverage, the Inquiry does have messages between me and those I most regularly communicated with through informal means," she wrote.

Sturgeon added: “Although these had not been retained on my own device, I was able to obtain copies which I submitted to the Inquiry last year.

“To be clear, I conducted the Covid response through formal processes from my office in St Andrews House, not through WhatsApp or any other informal messaging platform. I was not a member of any WhatsApp groups.

The National:

“The number of people I communicated with through informal messaging at all was limited.

“Also, any handwritten notes made by me were passed to my private office to be dealt with and recorded as appropriate. Throughout the entire process, I acted in line with Scottish Government policy.”

In evidence to the inquiry on Friday, Jamie Dawson KC, lead counsel, said “messages were not retained, they were deleted in routine tidying up of inboxes or changes of phones, unable to retrieve messages” concerning Sturgeon’s correspondence.

The SNP has been asked for comment.