Workers lobby parliament to end scandal of Lords' asbestos ruling
27th October 2009
- Photo opportunity: Asbestos sufferers, MPs, Tony Woodley,
Unite, GMB and Ucatt
- 2:30pm Wednesday, October 28th 2009, College Green,
Westminster
- Followed by a joint union (GMB, Ucatt and Unite) rally in the
Attlee Suite, Portcullis House, at 4pm
Workers and their unions will make yet another attempt to
persuade government to overturn a two-year old ruling by the Law
Lords which ended compensation to workers suffering from
work-induced asbestos diseases.
Unite, the UK's biggest union, which has many members suffering
from asbestos-related illnesses, denounced the Lords' ruling but
has also expressed anger at the government's failure to overturn
it, fearing that many of the victims will not live to see justice
done and will end their days struggling to make ends meet. The
union wants the government to use the time before the election to
restore compensation for the victims.
Since the Law Lords ruled in 2007 to end compensation, unions
have been pushing the government to act by either overturning the
decision and restoring the compensation system, or establishing an
alternative system of recompense.
A joint union rally in the Attlee Suite, Portcullis House, to be
held at 4pm on Wednesday, October 28th, to once again call on
Justice Minister Jack Straw to end the added suffering for the
workers.
Ahead of the rally, Tony Woodley, Unite joint general secretary,
said: "These men and women went to work healthy but came home
carrying a ticking time bomb and a high risk of full blown lung
cancer. Compensation, while it will not restore their health, goes
some way towards easing the anguish for them and their families. It
is scandalous, then, that we must continue to fight for justice
when the chief worry for them and their families is whether they’re
going to live long enough to benefit from it.
"Three unelected Law Lords, who I'm willing to bet have never
witnessed a member of their family suffering from this evil
disease, decided that pleural plaques is no longer a compensatable
disease. Shamefully, this government is letting this ruling stand
so that they can save £35 million a year and, in doing so, is
letting the greedy insurance industry dodge its duty to these
people so it can pocket £1.4 billion.
"But this isn’t just about money, it’s about justice and it’s
about employers accepting their liability for the pain, the anguish
and even the deaths that they have caused. I expect Jack Straw and
a Labour government to show working people the government is on
their side, to do so before the next election, and overturn the Law
Lords’ decision now."
Pleural plaques is an avoidable disease affecting around 14,000
people a year, although medical expertise suggests that if
screening were routine, this figure would rise significantly. It is
caused when the lungs have been heavily exposed to asbestos. Up
until 2007 when the Law Lords ruled against them, workers suffering
from the disease were able to claim compensation.
ENDS
For further information, please contact Pauline Doyle on 07976
832 861.
Notes to Editors: There is a growing body of evidence which
points to the relationship between pleural plaques and ill health,
including that highlighted in Pleural Plaques do hurt you
(TUC/Risks 416, July 25th, 2009) and Pleural Plaques linked to lung
cancer (TUC/Risks 409, June 6th, 2009).
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