A SCOT has become
the first soldier to be diagnosed with Gulf War Syndrome - despite
never setting foot in Iraq.
Alex Izett, 36,
fought a 10-year battle to force theMoD to admit he has the
crippling condition.
His suffering began
after he was given nine anti-biological warfare injections in 24
hours in preparation for combat - but was then never sent.
His victory means
he should get a full war pension, worth £6400-a-year.
Alex said: "This
has never been about financial gain - it's about getting the MoD to
admit it ruined lives."
The former lance
corporal, of Cumbernauld, tried to commit suicide twice after
developing osteoporosis, paralysis and kidney problems due to the
jabs.
He walks with a
stick, his jaw is crumbling, with teeth falling out, and his bones
are so weak he has broken his knee cap, shoulder and ribs. But the
MoD refused to accept his condition was linked to the injections and
awarded him just 70 per cent of a war pension.
If he died, wife
Gina, 39, would get nothing. Alex, who lives in Bersenbruck,
Germany, appealed and the War Pensions Appeal Tribunal ruled he had
GWS last week.
It is the first
time a non-deployed soldier has been officially recognised as having
the syndrome.
The Veterans Agency
will now decide whether he should be awarded the full £124-a-week
pension. The MoD must also pay his dental bills.
Alex was told he
was going to Iraq in January 1991 and had jabs to protect against
chemical weapons. Hesaid: "I asked what they were and was told: 'All
you need to know is they protect you.'
"I never thought
the Army would inject us with anything dangerous."
Alex quit in May
1991 when Gina fell pregnant with their daughter Sabrina, now 16. He
found a new job with Coca- Cola but was soon suffering from fatigue,
stomach ulcers and paralysis and was diagnosed with osteoporosis.
Alex - who also has
a stepson, Christopher, 20 - realised he had Gulf War Syndrome and
applied for a war pension but was refused a full one.
By 2001, he was
severely depressed and tried to take his own life by taking 160
prescribed anti-depressants. He tried again a year later.
Alex said: "I was
in massive pain and thought I'd never get them to admit the truth. I
saw no other way out."
When the Government
refused an independent inquiry into Gulf War Syndrome inMay 2004,
Alex went on a six-week hunger strike.
He lost three stone
before Labour peer Lord Morris of Manchester phoned to reveal a
probe was planned.
Alex said: "I'd had
enough of the lies. I was not afraid to die."
He finally won his
appeal last week and his victory could open the floodgates for
dozens of other soldiers.
The National Gulf
Veterans and Families Association's general manager, Maria Rusling,
said: "Alex having this illness without being in Iraq proves
anti-biological warfare injections are to blame."
The MoD said: "We
make awards wherever evidence of disablement is shown."
g.macaskill@sundaymail.co.uk |