82 people have died since call for infected blood compensation, say campaigners
Campaigners are to descend on Westminster to call on the Government to act.
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Your support makes all the difference.Some 82 victims of the infected blood scandal have died since recommendations were made about compensation for people affected by the scandal and their loved ones, campaigners have said.
Campaigners are planning a demonstration in Westminster on Wednesday calling for urgent action on compensation payments.
The Infected Blood Inquiry, which is due to publish its final report in May, made its final recommendations on compensation for victims and their loved ones in April 2023.
The Government has previously been accused of dragging its feet over compensation and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was heckled when he appeared before the inquiry last year as he vowed to pay compensation āas swiftly as possibleā.
Campaigners are assembling ahead of next weekās Budget to demand money is allocated to compensating people affected by the scandal.
Thousands of patients were infected with HIV and hepatitis C through contaminated blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.
Richard Angell, chief executive of Terrence Higgins Trust, said: āThere is no need to wait for the final blood inquiry report for the government to fund and legislate for compensation for those infected and affected.
āThe victims of this scandal have been waiting for justice for decades and shouldnāt be made to wait any longer, with 82 having died since the inquiry published its full and final recommendations on compensation in April 2023.ā
Kate Burt, chief executive of the Haemophilia Society, said: āIt is sickening and cruel that five decades after our community was exposed to the horror of the contaminated blood scandal, we are still waiting for government to right that wrong and take responsibility for what happened.
āThe Government must commit to paying full compensation and put an end to the long-standing, shameful political culture of passing the buck on this issue.ā
Rachel Halford, chief executive of The Hepatitis C Trust, added: āTodayās lobby reflects the communityās profound frustration and distress after more than 50 years without justice.
āThe Governmentās refusal to act is actively harming these people, people whose lives have already been devastated by infected blood.
āThey deserve better than this.
āWe are calling the GovernmentĀ to act: accept responsibility for this terrible scandal and pay compensation now.ā
A Government spokesperson said: āThis was an appalling tragedy, and our thoughts remain with all those impacted.
āWe are clear that justice needs to be delivered for the victims and have already accepted the moral case for compensation.
āThis covers a set of extremely complex issues, and it is right we fully consider the needs of the community and the far-reaching impact that this scandal has had on their lives.
āThe Government intends to respond in full to Sir Brianās recommendations for wider compensation following the publication of the inquiryās final report.ā
Earlier this month, concerns were raised about the expert appointed to advise the Government on compensation.
Professor Sir Jonathan Montgomery was appointed as chairman of a group of clinical, legal and social care experts to give ātechnical advice on compensationā.
But campaigners questioned Sir Jonathanās role at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, where he has been chairman since 2019, and his former membership of Bayerās bioethics council.
The Factor 8 campaign group said: āThe Oxford NHS Trust is at the heart of the infected blood scandal and Bayer manufactured and supplied much of the HCV (hepatitis C virus) and HIV infected Factor VIII products to the UK during the 1980s.ā