Treatment For Vietnam Vets Must Apply To All Occupations
Green Party Health Spokesperson Sue Kedgley today welcomed the Government's move to provide better health services for
Vietnam veterans and their families.
"The Green Party is delighted that finally, after decades of neglect, something now looks like happening for Vietnam
veterans and their families who continue to be haunted by the aftermath of their exposure to the defoliant Agent
Orange," said Ms Kedgley.
But she called on the Government to extend the same recognition and compensation, including veteran pensions at the
superannuation rate, to all servicemen and women who had become ill as a result of chemical, nuclear or biological
exposure during their service in the military.
Ms Kedgley cited as an example servicemen who were aboard the HMS Otago and Canterbury which was sent to Mururoa to
support a Greenpeace protest by the Labour Government in 1973.
"Many veterans who were on board the ship are seriously ill as a result of their exposure to nuclear radiation and some
have already died," she said. "But none of them are even eligible for veterans pensions, despite the damage to their
health caused in the course of their service on behalf of New Zealand. They are not covered under Section 80A of the War
Pensions Act which would entitle them to a veterans pension. They cannot even be buried in a serviceman's grave. Nor do
their surviving spouses have an entitlement to a pension.
"This is a scandal. We send men and women off to serve on our behalf, but when they become sick as a result of their
service to New Zealand we do not compensate them properly," she said.
The Green Party also urged the Government to compensate a range of other New Zealanders who have been chemically exposed
to dioxin and other chemicals in their jobs.
"Many timber workers are seriously ill as a result of their exposure to high concentrations of PCP's," she said. "These
other individuals need the same recognition and assistance from this Government as our Vietnam veterans.
"We congratulate the Government for taking the issue of the Vietnam vets out of the too hard basket but we ask that the
principle be applied fairly and to its logical conclusions."
Ends