'We weren't perfect', says bogus Covid lab accused

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Steve Jonesat Bradford Crown Court

BBC Faisal Shoukat pictured walking away from the court wearing a black overcoat and gold tie. He is carrying a briefcase.BBC

Faisal Shoukat, pictured leaving court, previously sat on Calderdale Council

An ex-politician accused of running a bogus coronavirus testing firm has told a court he "never said we were absolutely bob-on" in its operation.

Faisal Shoukat, who served as a Labour councillor on Calderdale Council, is on trial at Bradford Crown Court along with four others involved in RT Diagnostics - including the company's co-director, former justice minister Shahid Malik.

The defendants are accused of running a fraudulent business and public nuisance. Mr Shoukat, a pharmacist from Halifax, and Mr Malik, from Burnley, are also accused of money laundering.

The defendants have denied all of the charges.

Prosecutors have alleged Halifax-based RT Diagnostics "purported to be a testing laboratory" when in reality tests were "dumped in a room" with customers sent fake negative results for the deadly virus, thereby endangering people's health.

On Wednesday Mr Shoukat, 39, was questioned about a video published by The Sun newspaper which showed employees leaving a box of allegedly untested samples in a quarantine room where a cement mixer had also been left.

Mr Shoukat disagreed with a suggestion from prosecutor Jonathan Sandiford that such a move was "unhygienic", telling jurors: "It was waste and the room was being refurbished. The sample itself was sealed."

"I can assure you that samples weren't being dumped," he added.

Google A large office-type building with a sharp-pointed metal fence around the front.Google

The RT Diagnostics site, on Lister Lane off Francis Street in Halifax

Mr Shoukat said staff using scissors and craft knives to open test kits was "how we would typically open up a sample" and commonplace among other laboratories.

The trial previously heard how RT Diagnostics made £6.674m in just 31 days between 16 May and 16 June 2021.

"As the procedure became busier we developed, our dealings had to change," said Mr Shoukat.

"It's been framed that a bunch of young men sat around with craft knives. You have a sample opening room with employees wearing PPE opening samples."

Mr Shoukat said there was "no hoodwinking" of the accreditation body, UKAS (United Kingdom Accreditation Service).

Asked why the business did not put a pause on its operations given its challenges, he replied: "Hindsight is a wonderful thing. We tried our best to cope, we weren't perfect.

"I have never said we were absolutely bob-on. We had to adapt, we had to change."

Mr Shoukat, of Savile Park, is the first defendant to give evidence.

The trial, which is scheduled to last until March, continues.


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