Lee Dodds, also from the Scottish Covid Bereaved group, said it was hard to listen to the evidence.

I wanted answers but I didn’t get any

Lee Dodds, Scottish Covid Bereaved group

He said: “They go on about the WhatsApps, everything disappears and they don’t know how.  I was just scunnered with it.  I was getting bored listening to it about who was to blame, somebody else.

“But nothing about what happened to our loved ones.  There was nothing there for us bar them blaming it on other people.  And for me that wasn’t good enough for my son.  I wanted answers but I didn’t get any.”

Maggie Watterton lost both her husband and mother during the pandemic.

She told reporters after Mr Yousaf’s evidence that his apology was “woeful”.

And she described the “rhetoric” of the Scottish Government as “very far from the reality”.

Mrs Watterton added: “They failed to act, they failed in fact to take evidence, advice from well renowned experts.  They hid behind the empty words of the four harms framework, hid behind the mantra of reserved powers, delayed locking down in 2020, and it is obvious that ministers and officers of the government have been deleting crucial information which could materially impact the outcome of this inquiry.”

Mrs Watterton said their actions had “broken trust”.

She pleaded with both Mr Yousaf and former first minister Nicola Sturgeon to reflect on what they were doing deleting crucial evidence and their plans to reinstate independence campaigning while “people were dying in care homes”.

Meanwhile, responding to Humza Yousaf’s and Liz Lloyd’s evidence to the UK Covid inquiry, Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP said:

“Today’s evidence from Humza Yousaf and Nicola Sturgeon’s closest confidante raises yet more questions for the former First Minister about the culture and actions of the government she led. It’s clear that there was an instinct for secrecy at every turn, virtually everyone was locked out of decision making and that accountability went out the window.

“SNP ministers were making life and death decisions. The trust people have in those is being shattered by chaotic record keeping, a failure to properly log the context of decisions and the indefensible mass deletion of messages at the top of government.

“The use of private emails and phones begs more questions for Nicola Sturgeon ahead of her appearance next week.

“The result of all of this is that bereaved families may never get the full picture that they are so desperate for.”