'We want the truth' - families of Nottingham attacks victims speak ahead of public inquiry
'We want the truth' - families of Nottingham attacks victims speak ahead of public inquiry 5 hours ago Asha Pateland Emily Williamson ,East Midlands "It's taken a long fight to get here. " Dr Sanjoy Kumar told the BBC he had a "tear in his eye" when Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced a public inquiry into the Nottingham attacks last year.
Families of Calocane's victims and survivors have spoken of their fight for answers, and hope for the "full truth" ahead of the hearings.
Kumar said he would forever be connected to the victims' families, who had long called for a judge-led statutory inquiry, meaning witnesses would be compelled to give evidence. While it is still difficult for Kumar to refer to his daughter in the past tense, he said Grace was behind his motivation to keep pursuing accountability. "She is the driving force behind everything that we do and everything that I do, and we will be relentless," he said. Kumar said he wanted to see changes in the mental health system to prevent future killings.
"The only way we will do that is by holding people accountable, otherwise things won't change.
"We want absolute transparency. Patients and relatives deserve transparency," he said. Police officers and NHS employees, who were involved in Calocane's mental healthcare, are among those expected to give evidence. Calocane had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia prior to the attacks.
After lobbying from the bereaved families, survivors and campaigners, the prime minister agreed to the inquiry last year. What Kumar - who works as a GP - does not want to hear is that the attacks were "a result of cost cuts". He said: "I've been in the NHS since 1994, there has never been a time when we've had money but as a GP, I've done my job.
"Did people wake up in the morning and do the jobs that they're paid to do?"
Kumar believes there were several people involved in Calocane's care who did not.
"I'm a little bit anxious - a bit of trepidation - but I just want to get on with it now because it's been a very long, painful fight," she told the BBC. In short, Webber wants "the truth". "I mean the proper truth, not just versions thereof," she added. Despite the various reviews that had already taken place, hearing evidence from individuals was the level of accountability Webber said she and the other affected families wanted.
I have to do it for Barney," she said. Webber added: "We want those key things addressed but we do want it to be positive so that it helps the public, including those who are unwell and the institutions that are there to manage and treat them moving forwards. " In some ways, Wayne Birkett considers himself "privileged", having had no memory of what happened to him on the day of the attacks.
All three were seriously injured.
He also lost the memories of his entire life before the attack.
Nearly three years on, Birkett said "nothing's changed".
"My memory's still poor, headaches are still there, legs are still a problem, sleeping is still a problem," he said.
Gradually, he has learned more about what happened the day of the attacks. "There's a lot of questions for the police, there's a lot of things that need answering. "The start of the inquiry marks a watershed moment for those affected by the attack, and for the people of Nottingham," he said.
"This is the first real step in a long overdue process to establish what happened and why.
We have full confidence in the inquiry, and expect it to rigorously uncover the truth and deliver the answers our clients deserve. "
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