
The final days of the Covid-19 Inquiry are now in sight. This is a turning point for our campaign, and we cannot afford to lose momentum now.
Years ago, bereaved families came together because we knew many of these deaths could have been avoided. We demanded the truth. We demanded justice. We fought for a public inquiry, and we made it happen.
Now the hearings are coming to an end. And on Tuesday, 4 March, the final witnesses the Inquiry hears will be our members, the bereaved. The last voice on the record will be ours.
That moment matters. But what happens next matters even more. Justice is not a report that gathers dust. Justice means change. It means the Inquiry’s recommendations being implemented quickly and in full, so lives are protected when the next crisis hits. That is how future deaths are prevented. That is how the country honours the people we lost.
But that will not happen on its own.
Governments rarely move fast on uncomfortable truths. Without sustained pressure, recommendations risk being delayed, diluted, or quietly set aside. We know the consequences when warnings are ignored and preparation is not taken seriously. Our families paid that price.
This is where you come in.
Join us at 4.30pm on Tuesday, 4 March, outside the Inquiry to stand with bereaved families as the final witnesses give evidence, and the hearings draw to a close.
And please donate, if you can, to power the next phase of this campaign.
Your support funds the work that keeps pressure on ministers and MPs, challenges attempts to water down the Inquiry’s findings, and pushes for full implementation of the recommendations. It helps us organise, campaign, and make sure those in power cannot look away or move on.
Even a small donation helps keep this work going.
The hearings are ending. The fight for justice is not.