Belfast Telegraph

Support for people maimed in Troubles ‘not good enough’

- BY LESLEY-ANNE McKEOWN

WHEELCHAIR and prosthetic limb provision is worse in Northern Ireland than other parts of the UK, it has been claimed.

The warning came as some of those most seriously hurt in the Troubles demanded action.

Paul Gallagher, who has used a wheelchair since being shot in 1994, said: “It’s shocking that people whose lives are permanentl­y and catastroph­ically dam- aged by the conflict still have to lobby and plead with the authoritie­s at local and national level to give us just enough to allow us to lead lives as independen­tly as possible for as long as possible.

“In terms of the needs of wheelchair users like me or amputees who use prosthetic limbs, it is clear that the level of provision in Northern Ireland is lower than elsewhere in the UK and that is not good enough.”

Mr Gallagher is among a group travelling to Westminste­r to press MPs and peers to make the case for a special pension for the severely injured.

Many victims have had to survive on benefits because, as a result of their injuries, they were unable to build up workplace pensions.

“The Government’s refusal to treat the severely injured as part of the legacy of the conflict is part of the same kind of mindset,” Mr Gallagher said.

“The Secretary of State talks about the Government’s responsibi­lities to ‘provide better outcomes for victims and survivors, the people who suffered most during the Troubles’, but then in effect says that those responsibi­lities do not extend to men and women who lost eyes, arms and legs during the Troubles.

“We are treated as an embarrassi­ng inconvenie­nce because we have lived longer than expected. One of the reasons why we’ve lived far longer than predicted is because of the support of our families and a stubborn determinat­ion to make our lives work as best we can in circumstan­ces that we would not wish on anyone. We bring the same stubborn determinat­ion to campaignin­g for what we need that so far is being denied to us.”

Mr Gallagher’s group, which is being supported by the Wave organisati­on, will also visit the spinal rehabilita­tion unit at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Buckingham­shire and meet representa­tives from Limbcare and the Limbless Associatio­n.

Paul Gallagher was shot in 1994

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