Paul Nuki Profile picture
Aug 27, 2020 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
1/ We don't hear much of Europe's CDC @ECDC_EU but it has been a major force in shaping the pandemic response. I talked to its top expert Sergio Brusin for his predictions and reflections - you may be surprised by a lot of it...
telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
2/ Brits will remember Mr Brusin for warning, on March 8, that the UK was following Italy's trajectory and needed to lock down within days. The PM ignored him but he was right then and so it's worth listening to him now...
3/ Mr Brusin is now more upbeat. "The ICUs are not clogged and our health services now have much better planning and response times. So, I am optimistic we will not see the big horrible scenes we saw in March and April, but we will see a lot more cases," he says.
4/ He also thinks more national lockdowns are unlikely, despite what he expects to be a prolonged resurgence in cases. “I don't see the need for moving back to a full suppression strategy.... As long as hospitals can cope there is no need for such drastic measures.”
5/ He's also v good on what is pushing numbers up now: “What is really driving the resurgence is the fact that we have still quite a few gatherings of people.... it comes mostly from weddings, bars and discos; places were quite a lot of people are mixing together...
6/ “A lot of the new cases are among young people. This is good because they are less vulnerable but they will pass it up to older groups because that is how transmission works. For this reason, there a particular need to protect the vulnerable”.
7/ Mr Brusin won't name names but says the countries that did best planned for "Disease X' rather than the flu. This meant they had suppression and not just mitigation plans at the ready. "The countries that implemented tough measures early were the ones that had better plans”.
8/ He also thinks we got "lucky" with #COVID19 “In a way, we were lucky that this Covid pandemic was not really a black swan event. It was a white swan in terms of deaths. Certainly, it is nothing like the 1918 Spanish Flu or smallpox and cholera in the 1800s".
9/ Full interview here: telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…

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More from @PaulNuki

Apr 11
🧵There are several unexplained facts and unanswered questions about the IDF drone strike which killed seven @WCKitchen workers in Gaza last week.
Here's quick thread summarising our investigation over the past week... 1/x
telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
First, the most senior IDF commander dismissed for his role in the strike is a settler who signed an open letter in January calling for the territory to be deprived of aid, The Telegraph can reveal... Image
Michael Mansfield, KC, one of the UK's leading lawyers, says the letter is important because it "is plainly relevant to a particular state of mind”.Image
Read 10 tweets
Jun 29, 2023
You may or may not remember this man, but on or around 16 Aug 2020 he vanished.
Or to put it correctly, he *was* vanished by operatives of the DHSC.
Imagine then my surprise when he appeared at the #CovidInquiry on Wednesday alive and well - and hungry for revenge ...
You may not recognise him on account of the comedy mustachio he's borrowed from Mr Spud, but his name is Selbie, Duncan Selbie.
He's the former CEO of Public Health England and is viewed by DHSC as one of the most dangerous men ever to have walked the corridors of Whitehall.
Such were the security concerns surrounding his evidence, he appeared via video link from a safe house in Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, KC Kate Blackwell was scrambled for duty at the 11th hour and arrived in her whip with only moment to spare.

Read 16 tweets
Jun 22, 2023
The #CovidInquiry is dry but hugely important.

In a bid to make it accessible, while keeping it accurate, I've been penning daily Twitter threads.

You'll meet Good Chap Letwin, Ballroom Hunt, The Brain and The Eviscerator...

In publication order:
The good chap theory of disaster planning...
Read 5 tweets
Jun 22, 2023
It's hard to exaggerate the power of Prof Chris Whitty's brain.
It's like the Brain of Morbius (Dr Who '76) but dedicated to good rather than evil.
So when he was wheeled into the #CovidInquiry today I was well excited, init...
And The Brain did not disappoint.
It spoke at 453 words a second, causing the Inquiry stenographer to combust, but was perfectly clear on slow-mo rewind.
There was no bluster, only a tincy bit of equivocation and plenty of new, very precise, thinking...
KC Kate, aka The Eviscerator, was limbering up for the more debonair (and possibly slippery) Patrick Vallance later in the day, so it fell to a chap called Keith something-or-other to tackle the brain.
It was a good choice as Keith has a big brain too, according to his website
Read 24 tweets
Jun 21, 2023
Poor old George. He styles himself a man of vision but, as he was led from the dock at the #CovidInquiry yesterday, he left a behind a transcript that makes plain he abdicated his responsibilities in protecting Britain while Chancellor from 2010 to 2016.
covid19.public-inquiry.uk/wp-content/upl…
As he took the stand, the blood drained from his face and he seemed ready for a headline diverting scrap.
Attack was realistically going to be his only form of defence and, for an instant, I thought it was his warmer half, Dominic Raab, who was sitting there, coiled and prone

But George needed a chap to lock swords with. Someone who would enjoy a good old knock-about but knew where to draw the line. Instead he got KC Kate Blackwell, aka the eviscerator...
Read 18 tweets
Jun 20, 2023
Before we get to not so gorgeous George Osborne, it's worth a brief reflection on Oliver Letwin's evidence of this morning.

It might be summed up as the *good chap* theory of disaster planning.... Image
Now Oliver is a fine sort of fellow, astute and reflective, and it would be unfair to twat him about the head too hard, even when he's made a right Horlicks of things, as appears to be the case with getting the nation ready for Covid 19.
The KC was gentle and, after establishing Oliver's modus operandi - to be bloody nice to people and they'll be nice to you - he focused on two key issues ...
Read 11 tweets

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