Covid inquiry: WhatsApp messages of ex-Stormont ministers 'wiped'

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Arlene Foster and Michelle O'NeillImage source, PA
Image caption,

The inquiry heard the devices of former first minister Baroness Arlene Foster and deputy first minister Michelle O'Neill had been reset

WhatsApp messages sent by former Stormont ministers during the pandemic have been lost after government-issued electronic devices were wiped, the Covid Inquiry has heard.

These included the devices of ex-first minister Baroness Arlene Foster and deputy first minister Michelle O'Neill.

Counsel to the inquiry Clair Dobbin said its legal team had expressed "grave concern" over the loss.

A preliminary hearing is taking place into Stormont's response.

The head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, Jayne Brady, has been asked to provide a witness statement to explain the circumstances.

WhatsApp messages sent by UK ministers have featured separately in evidence given to the inquiry as it examined decision making by the government.

Ms Dobbin said informal communications such as WhatsApp messages "may be of a forensic value in preserving what individuals thought or knew at a given point in time".

She said after the inquiry was established in 2021, the permanent secretaries of all devolved departments were contacted asking them to ensure no material of potential relevance to the inquiry was destroyed.

Ms Dobbin said the inquiry had sought at "an early point" information on informal communications, including WhatsApp messages, sent by former Northern Ireland Executive ministers or senior civil servants.

She said that in August 2023, The Executive Office (TEO) notified the inquiry team of a potential loss of data in relation to the Northern Ireland Civil Service-supplied devices that were held by former Executive ministers and senior civil servants.

"TEO informed the inquiry that the government-supplied devices of the former first minister Baroness Arlene Foster and the deputy first minister Michelle O'Neill had been reset to factory settings," she added.

"It was said this was also the position in relation to other ministers and meant that no data was available from those devices."

'Formal investigation'

Ms Dobbin said the inquiry's legal team immediately expressed "grave concern" and sought the detail of what had happened.

"TEO informed the inquiry that it would ascertain the circumstances of what had happened in which the data loss arose.

"This became a formal investigation."

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The inquiry held a preliminary hearing into the devolved Stormont administration's response to the pandemic on Tuesday

Ms Dobbin said the Executive Office had provided a report to the inquiry last week and further information was being sought.

She also said that efforts were continuing to recover some of the material which had been lost.

"That some devices have been reset does not mean that there isn't WhatsApp material, there is," she said.

Ms Dobbin said the question of the "wiping or resetting of devices itself remains at large".

She said inquiry chair Baroness Heather Hallett "will undoubtedly want to have time to consider the report by the TEO and the witness statement" and "may also wish to consider the issue of the resetting of devices as part of your overall considerations about the use of informal communications".

Ms Dobbin said the inquiry team was "aware that the absence of power-sharing arrangements has added to pressures on departments and civil servants in responding to this inquiry," she said.

She added that the inquiry had, to date, received more than 35,000 documents of evidence from Stormont departments, including notes and minutes of Executive meetings and briefing papers.

A barrister representing the Northern Ireland Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group said his clients shared the inquiry's concerns over the data loss.

Image source, Getty Images

Peter Wilcock said he feared that an investigation carried out by TEO may be "insufficiently independent" and said the inquiry should consider whether an independent investigation was required.

He said: "Whilst we acknowledge the efforts put into bottoming out this issue, we trust the inquiry will be equally cognisant of the desire of our clients to have a clear idea of the extent of which such potentially relevant information has been lost."

Nessa Fee representing TEO, said the work of co-operating with the inquiry's modules had been "vast" for a small jurisdiction.

She added: "It goes without saying that there has been an absence of government in Northern Ireland since February 2022, the conditions in which The Executive Office and all the other departments are operating in response to this significant inquiry, most notably the financial conditions, are less than ideal.

"The Executive Office has worked hard to facilitate witnesses with access to the information and documentation they no longer have and that process has also been undertaken for both the former first and deputy first ministers."

Ms Fee told the inquiry that TEO had received a request for a statement from the head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, Jayne Brady, on the use of informal communications and added that work was under way in Stormont departments to retrieve available data from devices.