Yorkshire Post

MoD ‘failed to tackle fever risk to troops in Helmand’

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THE MINISTRY of Defence “failed to address the risk” posed to soldiers deployed to Afghanista­n by what is known as the Helmand group fevers, a court was told.

Wayne Bass, a private from the 2nd Battalion the Mercian Regiment, said his life has been ruined after serving in Helmand Province in 2011-2012 without being given antibiotic­s by the Army.

Humans can catch Q fever after breathing in dust from the faeces of infected farm animals such as sheep, cattle and goats. During his tour, Mr Bass was in contact with goats and sheep and “was often required to take cover and jump through ditches and crawl along the ground, coming into contact with animal products and excrement”, his lawyers said.

Mr Bass, 34, was medically discharged from the Army in 2014 because of his Q fever and chronic fatigue symptoms.

Theo Huckle QC told the court his client’s case was that there was a “well-establishe­d” known risk to soldiers deployed to the area of developing Helmand group fevers, including Q fever.

Opening the case, he said: “What he says, is the obligation of the MoD as his employer was to identify the risks to him in that regard, and to consider and to take all reasonable steps to minimise, remove or minimise the risks.”

In court documents setting out the case, it is argued that the MoD should have considered using doxycyclin­e, an antibiotic used to treat Q fever, as an anti-malarial drug.

Mr Huckle told the court: “In essence, the complaint that the complainan­t makes is that the MoD failed to address the relevant risks, concerned itself with its policy on anti-malarial protection, it did not properly address the risk of Helmand group fevers to the men, and having failed to address the risk, unsurprisi­ngly failed to take any steps to deal with that risk.”

Introducin­g the claimant to Judge Heather Baucher QC, Mr Huckle QC said he sometimes could be in “quite considerab­le discomfort”.

It is the first case to test the MoD’s duty to protect against Q fever, said Hilary Meredith Solicitors, the firm acting for Mr Bass, 34. The five-day trial started at the Central London County Court yesterday and continues today.

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