Covid-19 families say Stormont meeting is 'first of many'

Jayne McCormack
BBC News NI political correspondent
PA Members of the Northern Ireland Covid Bereaved Families for Justice group on the steps of Parliament Buildings at Stormont.

They are holding pictures of their family members and looking directly at the camera. 
The back row left to right:
male (bald in a black coat), female (blond, black top), male (grey short hair and grey suit jacket), female (blond, long hair and red top)
The bottom row left to right:
female (blond middle parting, glasses and brown coat), female (beige hat and coat with scarf and blond long hair), female (blond shoulder length hair and navy coat), female (cream zip up and short blond hair), female (black coat and red hair tied up), female (blue hair short and blue coat and scarf), female (brown coat and blond hair) and male (grey hair with blue shirt and tweed brown jacket). 

PA
Members of the Northern Ireland Covid Bereaved Families for Justice group on the steps of Parliament Buildings Stormont

Families in Northern Ireland who lost loved ones to Covid-19 have said they had a "productive" meeting with Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly at Stormont.

The meeting took place seven months after the group had made the request to meet the first and deputy first ministers.

The group was told First Minister Michelle O'Neill was sick and they said they were given a guarantee they will meet her in future.

Brenda Doherty's mother Ruth Burke died during the pandemic. She will mark the fifth anniversary of her death in March 2025.

"We feel we were heard but the proof will be in the pudding, if we don't see active engagement," she said.

"We've got a commitment from the deputy first minister, we will engage with officials and at a ministerial level."

She said she did not think the executive was better prepared yet in the event of another health pandemic, but said in time it could be.

"It's clear we are not going anywhere, it's taken seven months for this, it's just the first meeting of many."

Little-Pengelly said she had promised the families they would listen to them and will be "implementing these recommendations in a way that is fit for purpose in Northern Ireland".

She thanked the bereaved families for attending the meeting and paid tribute to "the incredible work they've done over a sustained period of time".

Little-Pengelly said the families had worked not only for justice for their loves ones but also to "try to improve processes" so that it does not happen to anybody else.