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Therese Coffey has been criticised after claiming she had never been asked about the death of an asylum seeker in Glasgow, despite previously being recorded refusing to talk about the incident.
Mercy Baguma’s body was discovered by police in Govan lying next to her starving baby on August 22.
The Work and Pensions Secretary was subsequently asked by the PA news agency about the death but refused to take questions, before telling Sky News she had never been approached on the subject.
When a reporter from PA began to ask a question about the matter on August 26, Ms Coffey interrupted.
She said: “I appreciate you want to talk about other matters, but they’re not really matters for me.”
When asked if she would at least hear the question, Ms Coffey added: “I’m conscious that there are some issues, but we really are here today to talk about pensions and climate change.”
The minister denied being asked about the Ugandan woman’s death and failed to express sympathy in relation to the incident when questioned by Sky’s Kay Burley on Wednesday.
She said: “I haven’t actually been asked about this lady before, so I don’t know where that’s come from.
“I’m afraid I don’t know the individual details of this lady.
“I don’t know the exact ins and outs, I know it happened in Glasgow fairly recently.
“When people are in very difficult situations like that and they’re looking for help from the Government, there are ways they can access that help.”
The apparent lack of compassion from the minister has drawn criticism from across the political spectrum.
This is not the first time (Therese Coffey) was asked about Mercy’s death and it’s disgraceful she didn’t make the effort to learn more
Chris Stephens, SNP MP for Glasgow South West, said: “This is beyond shameful from the Tory minister on the heartbreaking case of Mercy Baguma.
“Rather than addressing the high-profile case and her Government’s callous asylum policies that have pushed countless people further into hardship, Therese Coffey instead chose to dodge the details, act as though it had not come up before, and that she wasn’t aware of a story that has been in the press for weeks and raised by MPs.
“Her comments – or lack of – on the tragic difficulties facing Mercy Baguma only shine a light on a hostile and failed Tory immigration system that is simply treating human beings as numbers on a screen.”
Scottish Greens Glasgow City councillor Kim Long added: “It’s quite something for a senior Government minister to go on live TV and claim not to be aware of this, and further shows no remorse for the cruel consequences of their dehumanising rules.”
Scottish Liberal Democrats health spokesman Alex Cole-Hamilton MSP said: “Therese Coffey’s response to this harrowing incident was truly heartless.
“She couldn’t even summons the humanity to empathise with or apologise for the horrific circumstances Mercy Baguma was put in.
“This is not the first time she was asked about Mercy’s death and it’s disgraceful she didn’t make the effort to learn more.”