12 October 2007

Gulf War Syndrome - British MOD gives in after 16 years



The Ministry of Defence is to recognise Gulf War Syndrome after 16 years
 

Today, 12 October 2007, is a landmark date for British Veterans of the first Gulf War suffering from Gulf War Syndrome.

Defence Minister Lord Drayson said today that the Ministry of Defence had not handled this issue well from the beginning.

He said : "The department was slow to recognise the emerging ill- health issues and to put measures in place to address them. We have apologised for this and I repeat that apology today."

This is a major climbdown by the MOD which has insisted for 16 years that Gulf War Syndrome did not exist. This is a fundamental part of what is The Gulf Conspiracy.

The MOD had previously taken the stance that the gulf war illnesses were too varied to be called Gulf War Syndrome. This announcement today knocks that assertion on the head and furthermore ratifies 1 of the 3 R's, namely Realisation, Recompensation, Recommendation of the independent inquiry into Gulf War Illness carried out by Lord Lloyd Of Berwick. This independent inquiry reported in November 2004, and since then, the Government has paid lip service to The Lloyd Report.

At the start of this year, in January 2007, wartime forces sweetheart, Dame Vera Lynn branded the "endless" legal wrangling over payments to veterans of the first Gulf War a scandal.

On 8 May 2007, a poll of 121 MPs from all parties found that more than 70 per cent thought that the Government’s actions towards ex-Service people suffering from Gulf War Illnesses had been very poor or inadequate.

Dr Blockbuster has been calling on Gordon Brown to implement the recommendations of The Lloyd Report and clearly this is the FIRST POSITIVE STEP in that direction.

Defence Minister Lord Drayson said the MOD had written to veterans to tell them they can use the label Gulf War Syndrome and that the MOD are now working with experts to develop a rehabilitation programme.

We shall follow the development of this rehabilitation programme closely but the Governemt could best put money where it's mouth is by following the recommendations of The Lloyd Report and RECOMPENSING VETERANS

You can keep the pressure up on Gordon Brown to implement "Lloyd" by signing the petition

I leave the last words to Lord Craig and his concise summary included in The Lloyd Report:

Lord Craig (Lord Craig of Radley, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Chief of the Defence Staff throughout the Gulf War) said that the absence of closure after so many years was now indefensible. “A little magnanimity” was called for, and an “imaginative one-off approach”.
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11  October 2007


HANSARD 11 Oct 2007 : Column 341

House of Lords

Thursday, 11 October 2007.

GULF WAR ILLNESSES

Lord Morris of Manchester asked Her Majesty’s Government:

What further consideration they are giving to the problems and needs of veterans of the 1990-91 Gulf War, who have still undiagnosed illnesses, and of the families of those who have died since the conflict.

The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence & Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (Lord Drayson): My Lords, the health of Gulf veterans and support of their families remain a high priority for the Government. Appropriate pensions are paid. We have written to advise veterans on how they can have the label “Gulf War syndrome” applied to their disablements as an umbrella term. We are working with appropriate experts to develop a rehabilitation programme, and we are monitoring international research. We shall consider further reasonable proposals for UK research.

Lord Morris of Manchester: My Lords, while I am grateful to my noble friend, is it not disquieting that, 17 years on from the conflict, wrangling with veterans over pensions still drags on, with no visible sign of closure? Can he now at least make it clear that Gulf War syndrome will be fully recognised as a meaningful condition by the MoD, both publicly and when making assessment decisions, as it is by the Pensions Appeal Tribunal?

Finally, is it not deeply shaming that Gulf War veteran Terence Walker, whose case I raised orally earlier this year, his pension having been cut from 100 per cent to 40 per cent, died shortly after being left, together with dependent children—to quote his own words—“in financial ruin”? What sort of appreciation does that betoken of those prepared to lay down their lives for this country?

Lord Drayson: My Lords, my noble friend is absolutely right to raise these issues, as he has over many years. The issue of Gulf War syndrome will be fully recognised by the Ministry of Defence, and I accept on behalf of the Ministry of Defence that this issue has not been handled well from the beginning. The department was slow to recognise the emerging ill health issues and to put measures in place to address them. We have apologised for this, and I repeat that apology today.

With regard to the specific case that my noble friend mentions, I should also like to apologise on behalf of the Ministry of Defence to Mr Walker’s family. The Ministry of Defence made a mistake, and it has written to the Walker family to make that clear.


Bbb comment:  Here,(marked in red) we have the first public admission that the MOD is now recognising Gulf War Syndrome, nearly 3 years after "Lloyd" and 16 years after the end of the 1990/91 conflict.

However, this is only 1 of the 3 "R"s and we want to see the Government embracing the recommendations of The Lloyd Report and providing recompense to Veterans before it is too late. An apology means nothing.



3 September 2007


HELP TODD SANDERS !   (THIS FORM)

Gulf War veteran believes illness related to anthrax vaccine

Todd Sanders and his wife, Paula. 

KINGSPORT — Todd Sanders says he and thousands of other Gulf War veterans may be running out of time to live.

Sanders believes that’s because of the mandatory anthrax vaccine he and others received in the Army.

Late last year, at age 41, the Kingsport resident had a pacemaker installed to keep his heart rate and blood pressure up, but he still blacks out from low blood pressure from a condition called sinus bradycardia neurocardiogenic syncope.

His other medical problems include chronic fatigue, neurological symptoms, muscle deterioration, memory loss, ringing in the ears, double vision, confusion, depression, anxiety, incontinence, sleep apnea, respiratory distress, and extreme muscle and joint pain.

Sanders’ medical condition, however, has not been diagnosed as an illness related to his military service, so he does not receive any financial compensation for his illness. Sanders, a master auto mechanic who can no longer work, has not been able to obtain unemployment pay, military disability or Social Security disability, and this has put a severe financial hardship on his family.

Sanders is now seeking letters of support from veterans who have similar symptoms and received the anthrax vaccine.

He’s asking that anyone with past military service with similar medical issues fill out a Veterans Affairs Form No. 21-4138 — Statement in Support of Claim. The form is available HERE

Enough of those letters, according to Sanders and spokesmen for the military and VA, might convince the VA hospital system that his condition is related to his military service and open the door to receiving free health care from the VA system, including the Mountain Home Medical Center in Johnson City.

Sanders is an ASA master technician, General Motors master technician and Chrysler master technician.

“Days that I can do a little bit, I will,” Sanders said.

He has worked as a mechanic, for nine years at the old Sherwood Chevrolet in Johnson City, about five years at Courtesy Chevrolet in Kingsport, and almost four years at Carl Gregory Chrysler-Plymouth in Johnson City.

“You very seldom find somebody who would work as hard as he would,” said Keith Cutshall, who has known Sanders for 14 years.

“He’s just a good person,” Cutshall said. “It’s just a shame to see him going through this and can’t get any help.”

James Johnson, a serviceman at Carl Gregory who has known Sanders for 13 years said, “He’s very meticulous. He’s always done top-quality work.”

“He would be working on a car, kind of get a dizzy feeling and go over to his toolbox. The next thing you knew, he was sliding down his toolbox to the floor,” Johnson said.

Sanders’ doctors ordered him to stop working Jan. 26.

A neurologist is trying to find out what is causing this latest round of blackouts.

“The co-pays and deductibles we’ve been paying are overwhelming,” Sanders’ wife, Paula, said.

Johnson said the physical toll, however, was even greater.

“You could watch him deteriorate over time. You could see it happen.”

High school sweethearts, Todd and Paula Sanders attended North High School. They have been married 23 years and have a daughter, Tasha, who is a full-time nursing student who works at Holston Valley Medical Center.

Paula Sanders has worked in the snack distribution business and now works for Unilever in retail sales.

While Sanders believes he may have or be getting amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly called ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease, at least he is still among the living. The Internet is full of stories about Gulf War veterans who have died well after the war.

“Everybody he tried to find in his brigade, either he can’t find them or they’re dead,” Paula Sanders said.

Parallel stories told

Bill Robertson, one of Todd Sanders’ best Army buddies from Georgia who also served in the 3rd Infantry Division during Desert Storm, is among those already dead from what Sanders and others believe is Gulf War Syndrome. Sanders contacted his friend about a year and a half ago.

“Every single symptom Bill Robertson had, my husband had — every single one,” Paula Sanders said.

Robertson, who died in late December and had ALS, told Sanders he believed his condition was caused by the anthrax vaccine.

“That’s what they figure with me — I’ve either got multiple sclerosis or ALS,” Sanders said.

Robertson was deployed to Iraq, while Sanders stayed in Germany.

However, Sanders said both received the vaccine. He said they also were exposed to depleted uranium the military used to strengthen armor, chemicals used by the military and whatever else was in the environment of Iraq.

A recent study that received worldwide attention said that Iraqi munitions American troops destroyed had sarin, a nerve gas that could be causing or aggravating Gulf War Syndrome.

Sanders said he and Robertson may have gotten that exposure from military vehicles — Robertson from serving in Iraq and Sanders in Germany from cleaning vehicles used in Iraq.

But Sanders said he believes — and that Robertson believed — their condition was caused by the anthrax vaccine, which made him sick and almost caused him to pass out when he first received it.

Sanders said he believes the squalene — used to make the immune system quickly develop immunity — in too large doses make the immune system attack itself. The approval of that anthrax vaccine, which is no longer used, was expedited by the Food and Drug Administration.

“I started getting insomnia, joint pain and soreness immediately,” Sanders said.

He continued his military service, started in 1987, until a discharge in 1992. And although he had some times with few symptoms, he said his energy and strength never went back to pre-vaccine levels.

Sanders was able to work for years, but he said things got quickly and progressively worse starting in 2001. And he began having blackouts.

Stories nationwide and worldwide abound of veterans with similar health ills, including British soldiers who report similar problems getting their government to recognize the connection between their condition and military service.

But Paula Sanders said she and her husband take some comfort in the outcome of a 21-year-old soldier’s recent success in getting his heart problem disability — and plans to install a pacemaker — recognized as service related by a military discharge board.

David Brace, the 21-year-old soldier, received a newer anthrax vaccine that is supposed to be safer.

The Brace and Sanders families, along with Dr. Meryle Nass of Bar Harbor, Maine, have been communicating over the Internet about common threads in various cases nationwide. Nass in late July testified at a hearing of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, Subcommittee on Health.

Nass said Gulf War Syndrome symptoms overlap closely with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivity and irritable bowel syndrome.

Sanders said about 700,000 soldiers received the anthrax vaccine in the first Gulf War, with more than 1 million receiving a later version of the anthrax vaccine.

Nass said 200,000 “Gulf War I” veterans have chronic “Gulf War” illness related to their deployment and cited a Washington Post article that said 199,000 Gulf War veterans receive compensation for such illnesses. But Sanders is not among the 199,000.

Sanders on a new mission

Blackouts or not, with the help of his wife, Todd Sanders’ new full-time mission is trying to get the word out to other Gulf War veterans. And to get the support letters from veterans who have similar symptoms and received the anthrax vaccine.

But one problem that Sanders and others who served from 1987 to 1992 face is a lack of medical records. Working through the office of U.S. Rep. David Davis, R-1st District, Sanders was able to get copies of his military entry and exit physical exams.

Everything else, including the record of his anthrax and other vaccines received while in service, are gone. He said a VA official once told him they were “inadvertently destroyed.”

In a nutshell, Washington, D.C.-based Veterans Affairs spokesman Jim Benson and Northern Virginia-based Department of Defense spokesman Terry Jones said veterans seeking full VA health care must show their injury, illness or disability is connected to their military service.

They said the letters of support can help Sanders.

However, Benson and Jones also said they were not aware of a mass loss or destroying of records from the Gulf War era, although Sanders said they have been told by VA officials and others that medical records went missing for many who served in the Gulf War.

As for Todd Sanders’ claim, Jones said he would contact folks in the DOD in an attempt to help find Sanders’ medical records. And although he’s never met or talked with Sanders, he did have a friend who served in the Gulf War.

“He said there was something to it,” Jones said of aftereffects of the war. “He did eventually die.”

Cathy Brace, the mother of the 21-year-old veteran with heart problems, recently wrote that the problem with vaccine records that do exist is that they bear the date of when the vaccine was recorded, not when it was actually given, although Jones said he never heard of that happening.

One other option to get some VA medical care is based on income levels, but the Sanderses made too much last year. However, with Todd having almost no income this year, Paula said he may be eligible next year. They have been turned down twice this year and their appeal denied for income-based VA assistance.

Sanders plans for future

Sanders said if he can convince the federal government his condition is related to his military service and get some civilian and/or military disability, his goal is to work on behalf of other veterans with Gulf War Syndrome.

“Once we get ours done, I think we’ll be able to help people a whole lot,” Sanders said.

Lori Cutshall, wife of Keith Cutshall and a friend of the Sanderses who attends church with them at Christ Fellowship, has helped set up an account for donations to help pay for his medical care.

Donations, which are tax deductible, can be sent to Christ Fellowship Church, attention Melinda Williams, 260 Victory Lane, Kingsport, TN 37664. The memo line of checks should be filled out “Todd and Paula Sanders.” For more information call the church at 349-0600.

To contact Sanders call 247-1987 or e-mail schweinfurtautowerks@charter.net or paula.sanders@lorwings.net.

Source: TimesNews.net



27 July 2007

ANALYSIS: GULF WAR ILLNESS STILL INCURABLE

UPI Correspondent
WASHINGTON, July 27 (UPI) -- Many U.S. Gulf War veterans continue to suffer from mysterious illnesses more than 16 years after the conflict ended, several witnesses testified this week before a congressional committee.

"One in four of those who served -- 175,000 veterans -- remains seriously ill," James Binns, chairman of the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses, said at a House of Representatives Health subcommittee hearing.

Gulf War syndrome or illness manifests itself through a plethora of symptoms, including dizziness, fatigue, diarrhea and other gastrointestinal problems, severe headaches, respiratory problems, stiffness and difficulty concentrating. Veterans began displaying these symptoms before the war ended in 1991, but a decade and a half later, many physicians feel unsure of how to treat these patients

"There remains no effective treatment," Binns said.

In the absence of any cure, many doctors resort to treating each individual symptom with different medications, such as sleeping pills and diarrhea medication, said Meryl Nass from Mount Desert Island Hospital in Bar Harbor, Maine, who has conducted a specialty clinic to treat patients with Gulf War syndrome for eight years.

"It's a piecemeal approach," Nass said at the hearing. "You can improve their functioning maybe 30 or 40 percent, but they certainly don't get cured."

One of the difficulties in treating the illness lies in general confusion over the exact causes of the illness and a lack of effective research on treatments, witnesses said. Although research has not proven definitive causes, the high level of toxins military personnel were exposed to probably caused most of the damage, said Lea Steele, scientific director of the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses.

"The most consistent and extensive amount of available evidence implicates a group of chemicals to which veterans were exposed that can have toxic effects on the brain," Steele said. "These chemicals include pills -- NAPP pills or pyridostigmine -- given to protect troops from the effects of nerve agents, excessive use of pesticides and low levels of nerve gas."

Other toxins include smoke from more than 600 burning Kuwaiti oil wells, military vaccines and low-level doses of chemical weapons, Steele said.

While the symptoms of Gulf War syndrome overlap with those of many other illnesses, they manifest themselves much more heavily in Gulf War veterans than those from other eras, suggesting something specific in the Gulf War triggered this new syndrome, Steele said.

"It's not what we see in the general population and it's not what we see in any other veterans group this age," she said.

This hodgepodge of health problems seen in Gulf War veterans is not simply a manifestation of psychological problems either, Steele said.

"Comprehensive studies have found no connection between Gulf War illness and combat experiences in the war," she said. "This stands to reason since, in contrast to current deployments, severe stress and trauma were relatively uncommon in the 1991 Gulf War."

The war itself lasted for less than six months, with only four days of ground combat.

The $260 million spent on Gulf War illness research by the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs has resulted in few breakthroughs, Nass said. One reason for this lies in an a focus on psychiatric causes, instead of toxins or vaccines and research that did look at these factors often had faulty methodology, leading to useless results, she said.

"Failed research does not happen by itself," Nass said.

In many studies, the wrong questions were asked, dubious research methods were used or sample sizes were too small to yield statistically significant data.

Much of this research resulted from an effort to discount veterans' claims that their sickness resulted from their military service, said Anthony Hardie, legislative chair and national treasurer for Veterans of Modern Warfare, a veterans advocacy organization.

"Years were squandered disputing whether Gulf War veterans were really ill, studying stress (and) reporting that what was wrong with Gulf War veterans was the same as after every war," Hardie said. "An incredible amount of effort was put into disproving the claims of countless veterans testifying before Congress about chemical and other exposures."

However, Veterans Affairs officials said the department has continuously worked to respond to the unique symptoms of Gulf War veterans.

"Even before the 1991 Gulf War ceasefire, VA had concerns that returning veterans might have certain unique health problems, including respiratory effects from exposure to the intense oil fire smoke," said Lawrence Deyton, chief public health and environmental hazards officer for the Veterans Health Administration. "VA quickly established a clinical registry to screen for this possibility."

But the data collected from the registry does not prove that Gulf War veterans suffer from any unique illness, Deyton said.

"After 15 years, the principal finding from VA's systematic clinical registry examination of about 14 percent of 1991 Gulf War veterans is that they are suffering from a wide variety of common, recognized illnesses," he said. "However, no new or unique syndrome has been identified."

The department did ask Congress for the authority to provide disability coverage, though, to veterans with difficult-to diagnose or undiagnosed illnesses who claimed the problem stemmed from military service.

"This statute as amended authorizes VA to pay compensation for disabilities that cannot be diagnosed as a specific disease or injury, or for certain illnesses with unknown cause including chronic fatigue syndrome ... and irritable bowel syndrome," Deyton said.

However, the government should take greater responsibility for conducting research on how to treat these veterans, said Brig. Gen. Thomas Mikolajcik, a Gulf War veteran diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease, a rare condition that causes a progressive degeneration of the nerve cells in the brain and occurs twice as much in military personnel as among the rest of the population and two times as often among Gulf War veterans as other veterans.

"Establish a congressionally directed ALS Task Force with specific milestones and a time line," Mikolajcik said.

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 30 July 2007 : Bbb comment on above article:

Dr Blockbuster cannot believe half of what is written here.

After 16 years there are better explanations available than this. Dr Blockbuster has written to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown asking him to implement the recommendations of the Lloyd Report. Read that here.
http://www.blockbusterbooks.co.uk/GordonBrown.html

Paragraph 224 of the Lloyd Report   (published 17 November 2004) :.... "the picture is already sufficiently clear to enable the MOD to acknowledge forthwith that the illnesses of the Gulf War veterans, who have had their claims accepted, are attributable to their service in the Gulf. To wait for further research into the pathology would, after fourteen years (now 16 years), be a denial of justice to the veterans."

Look at the 3 R's:

REALISATION

RECOMPENSE

RECOMMENDATION
 

As to what Deyton said above:

"After 15 years, the principal finding from VA's systematic clinical registry examination of about 14 percent of 1991 Gulf War veterans is that they are suffering from a wide variety of common, recognized illnesses," he said. "However, no new or unique syndrome has been identified."  ... perhaps he is not aware of the Inquiry carried out by Lord Lloyd ... though I find that unbelievable in the extreme.

Dr Blockbuster believes all involved should pay the utmost respect to the view of Lord Craig as reported in the Lloyd Report resume:

Lord Craig (Lord Craig of Radley, Marshal of the Royal Air Force,  Chief of the Defence Staff throughout the Gulf War) said that the absence of closure after so many years was now indefensible.  “A little magnanimity” was called for, and an “imaginative one-off approach”.

 
Need I say more?

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24 July 2007 00.00

Calls on British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to implement recommendations of Lloyd Report

 



The gauntlet laid down for Gordon Brown:

Some 250,000 of the returning allied forces from the first Gulf War in 1991 (15 per cent) went down with illness that they insist was related to their service in that war. Of these, 10,000 are already dead.

Successive governments over the years have refused to recognise the existence of a single condition called Gulf War Syndrome and so the impasse continues.

On 14 June 2004 it was announced that there was to be a Public Inquiry into the illnesses suffered by veterans returning home from the first Gulf War.

This public inquiry was chaired by The Rt Hon The Lord Lloyd Of Berwick and on 17 November 2004, the inquiry published its report -The Lloyd Report on Gulf War Illnesses, commonly referred to now as The Lloyd Report.


The following are the 3 R's of The Lloyd Report that Gordon Brown needs to accept:

1. REALISATION -  realisation it IS Gulf War Syndrome

Paragraph 283 of the Lloyd Report:

283. It seems to us that with the termination of any legal proceedings against the MOD, and with the results of the three epidemiological surveys to hand, now is the time to reach agreement with the veterans. This was the strong thrust of Lord Craig’s evidence. The MOD could initiate the process by taking the following steps:-
(1) The MOD should acknowledge publicly that the veterans who have made
claims (other than the 272 who have had their claims rejected) are indeed
suffering injury or disease as a result of their service in the Gulf.
(2) Since the name of the injury or disease is only a label for wrapping the
symptoms from which the veterans are undoubtedly suffering, the Ministry of
Defence should accept the name favoured by the veterans, i.e. Gulf War
Syndrome, as the most convenient label.

 
2. RECOMPENSE - recompense Veterans

Paragraph 283 of the Lloyd Report continues:

(3) The MOD should set up a fund out of which ex gratia payments should be
made on a pro-rata basis to all those who have made successful claims.
(4) The 272 Claimants who have had their claims rejected should have those
claims reviewed in the light of this report.

 

3. RECOMMENDATION - The Government needs to follow the Recommendations of The Lloyd Report

 
Paragraph 224 of the Lloyd Report:

.... the picture is already sufficiently clear to enable the MOD to acknowledge forthwith that the illnesses of the Gulf War veterans, who have had their claims accepted, are attributable to their service in the Gulf. To wait for further research into the pathology would, after fourteen years (now 16 years), be a denial of justice to the veterans.


 


Is it no wonder that Dr B has been in touch with Sir Sean Connery, Jerry Weintraub, SKG and others with A View To A ...Film!  What happened to Nixon after Watergate and All the Presidents Men?

This year we have seen pressure on the Government as follows:

  • 8 May 2007: A recent poll of 121 MPs from all parties found that more than 70 per cent thought that the Government’s actions towards ex-Service people suffering from Gulf War Illnesses had been very poor or inadequate

 

The Lloyd Report  résumé also nails the need as follows:
"10. We come last to the question of compensation.  This did not figure largely in the evidence of the veterans themselves.  But it figured in the evidence of Lord Craig, Major General Craig, Paul Tyler MP, Michael Mates MP, Colonel Terence English and others.  Lord Craig (Lord Craig of Radley, Marshal of the Royal Air Force,  Chief of the Defence Staff throughout the Gulf War) said that the absence of closure after so many years was now indefensible.  “A little magnanimity” was called for, and an “imaginative one-off approach”.  Mr Mates told us that what was needed was a political act of will. 

 “A minister has to say ‘this will be done’ and then it is done”. "

 


The Rt Hon Alan Johnson was appointed Secretary of State for Health in June 2007, as part of Gordon Brown's first Cabinet. Alan Johnson held a number of posts representing employees since 1976 and was elected to the National Executive Council in 1981. He became General Secretary in 1992 and Joint General Secretary of the CWU from 1995 to1997.He was a Member of the General Council TUC from 1994 to 1995 and a member of the Labour Party NEC from 1995 to 1997.

I call on Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, and Secretary of State for Health, Alan Johnson, to intervene now, without further delay.

If you wish to call on Gordon Brown for "a little magnanimity", then this is how to contact Mr Brown.

Dr B
24 July 2007.




08 May 2007

70% of MPs believe Government's treatment of 1990-91 Gulf Veterans is inadequate

Home
70% of MPs believe Government's treatment of 1990-91 Gulf Veterans is inadequate

A recent poll of 121 MPs from all parties found that more than 70 per cent thought that the Government’s actions towards ex-Service people suffering from Gulf War Illnesses has been very poor or inadequate

The Royal British Legion has released the shocking figures on the eve of a Gulf War Veterans conference in Birmingham, where veterans will demand a one-off payment of £10,000 to those affected. 

The Royal British Legion’s Director of Welfare, Sue Freeth, says that the £10,000 payment is in line with other UK ex gratia award schemes, and is fully endorsed by members of the Gulf War Group which features Parliamentarians, ex-Service charities and members of the scientific, legal and medical community.   

“In 2004, Rt. Hon. Lord Lloyd of Berwick made a recommendation for an ex gratia payment for Gulf War veterans as part of his findings in an independent public inquiry into Gulf war illnesses,” she said.  “Tomorrow’s conference will seek support for the immediate offer of the ex gratia payment - based on the government’s failure to protect veterans, the treatment they have received and the resulting anxiety.”   

Up to 100 delegates including gulf veterans and their families will be attending the Gulf War Veterans’ Conference at the Radisson SAS Hotel in Birmingham tomorrow.

They will hear an address by Minister for Veterans, Derek Twigg MP - the first time in 10 years that a Veterans Minister has spoken to a gathering of Gulf Veterans about their illnesses. 

Sue Freeth said: “The Gulf War Group would like to see firm priority given to further research into rehabilitation, health and social care models that can improve the quality of life and general health of veterans and their families.” 

Even though 16 years have passed, the veterans and the scientific community are still no clearer on the causes of their illnesses, some of which have proved terminal.  

Research has confirmed that Gulf War veterans are more than twice as likely to report symptoms of ill health, and to be suffering more severely from them, than their military contemporaries of equivalent age, gender, rank and branch of service. Epidemiological studies used to investigate causal links with illness have been hampered by the lack of accurate data, including service records and medical and/or vaccination records.   

Health surveillance was not carried out during deployment, nor immediately post deployment.  The lack of clarity on exposures has resulted in lengthy delays for veterans seeking pensions and compensation for their conditions. 


 

 For details of the Gulf War Conference on 9 May, including the Agenda, please click here.

To read the policy document - Gulf War: a legacy of suspicion, please click here.



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