Rishi Sunak snubs ‘nuked blood’ veterans 12 TIMES

Rishi Sunak has been accused of “a blatant act of betrayal” for refusing to satisfy victims of the nuked blood scandal.

Campaigners have requested the Prime Minister for a gathering 12 occasions within the 17 months since he took workplace, however have been repeatedly ignored.

Now veterans of Cold War nuclear bomb assessments are getting ready to take the Ministry of Defence to courtroom, claiming that blood samples taken through the trials could show they had been irradiated, and are actually being illegally withheld.

If such blood assessments exist, they might show the veterans’ claims to have been left with a legacy of most cancers, blood problems and beginning defects because of radiation poisoning. It might result in mass compensation payouts.







Prime Minister Rishi Sunak lays a wreath for nuclear take a look at veterans, shortly earlier than promising a gathering about their lacking medical information
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Reach Commissioned)

Survivor John Morris, who has been refused a warfare pension for a blood situation he developed after serving at Operation Grapple on Christmas Island in 1958, stated: “I remember the blood tests being taken, we have found the orders for them to be taken, but they are not in my files.

“The same is true for thousands of others, and we cannot get either compensation, justice, or the right medical treatment, without those results. Only the PM can order the MoD to cough them up, and I would ask him very politely to do the right thing.”

When he was operating for workplace, Sunak pledged his help for a prison investigation into the whereabouts of the blood testing.

During the Tory management marketing campaign in 2022, a spokesman for Sunak instructed the Mirror: “Rishi supports the campaign for nuclear veterans to be recognised for their service. We are incredibly grateful for our nuclear veterans’ sacrifice which kept Britain safe during the Cold War… He would also back an investigation into whether the tests represented a criminal offence towards these veterans.”






Veterans laid wreaths on the Ministry of Defence in protest at their lack of a medal. They are actually getting ready authorized motion over lacking medical information

And after an occasion the place he introduced a medal just a few months later, he promised a gathering to John’s granddaughter Laura.

But six months after he wrote to her, saying: “I was greatly moved to meet and speak with the veterans during the event, including your grandfather… I want to thank him, not only for his years of service and campaigning, but also for bravely sharing his experiences with others.

“Unfortunately on account of diary pressures, I’m presently unable to satisfy you.”

Now LABRATS founder Alan Owen, whose father served on the trials, stated: “We have asked him, his office, and his closest advisers, a total of 12 times since then to arrange the meeting. We’ve had two replies, which both said he’s too busy.

“From a man who saw and heard the relief that the medal brought to these families, who shook our hands for a photo, it is a blatant act of betrayal. These men delivered the nuclear deterrent, without which Rishi Sunak would not even get a phone call with other world leaders. They deserve better.”

Human rights lawyer Jason McCue, who’s main a recent authorized motion by veterans, stated: “It is sad the PM will not sit down with these men to discuss what is as plain as a pikestaff to everyone else. It is time we stopped treating our heroes as guinea pigs and started treating them like lions.”

The Mirror, which has campaigned for the nuclear veterans since 1983, uncovered the nuked blood scandal in 2022. We showed the evidence to then-PM Boris Johnson, who confirmed that if medical records were being withheld it would be a crime.

Since then, the MoD has admitted holding documents on blood testing which it had previously denied existed, and a ministerial review of the papers we found is due to report by the end of March.

Veterans Minister Johnny Mercer has told Parliament “there is no cover-up” and claimed a number of the orders had been by no means adopted. When introduced with proof of the lacking information, he suggested veterans to sue the federal government.

Cold WarHuman rightsJohn MorrisJohnny MercerMinistry of DefenceNuclear test veteransNuked blood scandalPoliticsRishi Sunak