Former
Supermarket Boss
Warns of Potential
Coronavirus “Food Riots,”
Army Patrols
Grocery
stores may have to take drastic measures.
7
March, 2020
Former
Tesco supply chain director Bruno Monteyne warns that a large scale
outbreak of coronavirus in the UK could lead to “food riots,”
requiring the army to be used to guard supermarkets.
Monteyne
said that supermarkets would have to resort to drastic measures and
revert to “feed the nation status” under a worse case scenario.
He
also cautioned that grocery stores would have trouble stocking
shelves and delivering goods if their employees decided to
self-isolate.
“Yes,
it will be chaotic (and expect pictures of empty shelves),” wrote
Mr Monteyne, “but the industry will reduce complexity to keep the
country fed.”
He
said that the army may need to be drafted in to guard stores and
prevent disorder.
UK
Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he was “confident” food
supplies would not run out and that there was “absolutely no need”
to panic-buy.
Hancock
also claimed that supermarkets could deliver food to coronavirus
patients who had self-isolated, although this claim was immediately
put in doubt by one supermarket executive, who said he was “baffled”
by the suggestion.
“Matt
Hancock has totally made up what he said about working with
supermarkets. We haven’t heard anything from government directly,”
the executive said, adding, “I’m not sure the government can
guarantee all food supply in all instances.”
A
source at another supermarket told the BBC that there had been no
detailed planning involving government departments about “ensuring
uninterrupted food supplies.”
Panic
buying continued across the UK today, with supermarket shelves of
goods like hand sanitizer, toilet paper and medicine.
The
number of coronavirus cases in the UK has now reached 163, with two
deaths.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.