Medicine Hat News

Survivors slam disabiliti­es minister; Hehr sorry for ‘insulting’ comments

-

OTTAWA A contrite-sounding Kent Hehr publicly apologized Tuesday to a group of thalidomid­e survivors who accused the disabiliti­es minister of belittling them and their cause as a “sob story,” among other insults, during an in-person meeting earlier this year.

Hehr, who lives with a disability himself and is in a wheelchair, said he meant no harm during his face-to-face meeting Oct. 19 with members of the Thalidomid­e Survivor Task Group, all of them victims of the devastatin­g side effects the long-banned pregnancy drug.

“I apologize for what transpired in the meeting, for the way they feel the meeting went,” Hehr said outside the House of Commons under the hot glare of television lights. “There’s no doubt about that.”

What transpired, spokeswoma­n Fiona Sampson told a bombshell news conference Tuesday, was this: “‘Everyone in Canada has a sob story,’” Sampson quoted Hehr as saying. “‘Lots of people have it bad in Canada— disabled people, poor people, not just you.’” She also accused him of saying the survivors were better off now than when they were kids.

And when Hehr was told about the impact their condition was expected to have on their life spans, Sampson alleges he responded: “‘So, you probably have about 10 years left now. That’s good news for the Canadian government.’”

In a written statement that was released shortly after the news conference, Hehr flatly denied making the latter remark and described the first two comments as having been “misconstru­ed.” He said he apologized to the group directly last month.

Sampson also accused Hehr of touching a survivor in an “unwelcome” way during the meeting, calling it “physical contact that violated her personal space.”

Hehr had no recollecti­on of that, but apologized for it anyway: “If there was any physical contact, it was completely accidental and I apologize.”

The survivors were on Parliament Hill to push Ottawa into further action to help the victims of thalidomid­e — in particular, a $250,000 lump sum in compensati­on per person, up from the current $125,000, and enriched annual pensions.

But their allegation­s against the minister stole the spotlight.

“We were shocked and stunned because really, he is the minister responsibl­e for persons with disabiliti­es,” Sampson said. “He’s supposed to be our champion ... Not only did he not step up as a champion, but he degraded us, he insulted us.”

 ?? CP PHOTO FRED CHARTRAND ?? Members of the Thalidomid­e Survivors Task Group hold a news conference on Parliament Hill Tuesday. From left are Fiona Sampson, Mary Ryder, Lee Ann Dalling and Alexandra Niblock.
CP PHOTO FRED CHARTRAND Members of the Thalidomid­e Survivors Task Group hold a news conference on Parliament Hill Tuesday. From left are Fiona Sampson, Mary Ryder, Lee Ann Dalling and Alexandra Niblock.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada