The infected blood scandal was "not an accident" - and its failures lie with "successive governments, the NHS, and blood services", a public inquiry has found.

From the 1970s, 30,000 people were "knowingly" infected with either HIV or Hepatitis C because "those in authority did not put patient safety first", the report into the inquiry said. Around 3,000 people died.

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The response of the government and NHS has "compounded" victims' suffering, added inquiry chair Sir Brian Langstaff.

The response included the "deliberate destruction of some documents" by Department of Health workers, in what Sir Brian described as a "pervasive cover-up" and "downright deception".

Among the key findings are:

  • Patients were knowingly exposed to unacceptable risks of infection;
  • The risk of blood products causing severe infection were well known before most patients were treated - in the case of hepatitis since the end of the Second World War;
  • Transfusions were frequently given in situations where they were not clinically needed;
  • Pupils at Treloar's school were regarded as "objects of research rather than children";
  • Blood products imported to treat many people were unsafe and should not have been licensed for use in the UK;
  • There was no contact tracing exercise carried out when Hepatitis C screenings were introduced;
  • There were repeated and ongoing failures by governments and the NHS to acknowledge people should not have been infected;
  • They repeatedly used inaccurate, misleading and defensive lines;
  • Infected people were "cruelly" told they received the best treatment available;
  • There was a refusal for decades to provide compensation;
  • Governments refused to set up a public inquiry until 2017.

Sir Brian's report makes 12 recommendations, including an immediate compensation scheme, memorials across the UK and at Treloar's school, and that anyone who received a blood transfusion before 1996 be urgently tested for Hepatitis C.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is expected to make an official apology on behalf of the government later today.

But the report stresses that for it to be meaningful "it must be accompanied by action".

Such action includes a "national recognition of this treatment disaster" and a change in culture across the NHS and civil service.

After the 2,527-page report was published on Monday, victims spoke at a news conference in central London.

Clive Smith, of the Haemophilia Society, said the "cover-up" came as "no surprise" to him and others infected.

"We've known for decades. Now the country knows, the whole world knows," he said. "This was systemic, by government, the civil service, and healthcare professionals."

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Mr Smith added: "There are doctors out there who should have been prosecuted for gross negligence manslaughter… those people should have been in the dock."

Jason Evans, part of the Factor VIII campaign group, said: "Many of the politicians should hang their heads in shame… no single person has been responsible for this scandal."

He added: "I would expect, over the coming days and weeks, for many more people to come forward and say sorry."

And Andy Evans, representing the Tainted Blood campaigners, challenged those in authority, saying: "We know that this should never have happened. What was your part in it?"

He went on: "Justice delayed really is, in this case, justice denied."

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