Sunday, February 13, 2011

MP criticises care for veterans

British soldier in AfghanistanElfyn Llwyd said there was a "mandatory duty" on the government to implement the military covenant
Related Stories

Veterans are being "stitched up" by ministers' failure to put the military covenant into law, an MP has said.

Elfyn Llwyd is questioning the government's commitment to the covenant - the relationship between society and its armed forces.

He said politicians owed military personnel a "duty to ensure their wellbeing upon their return home".

Mr Llwyd, Plaid Cymru's leader at Westminster, plans to table a series of amendments to the Armed Forces Bill.

He said: "It is politicians who place these brave troops in harm's way. We owe them a duty to ensure their wellbeing upon their return home. Anything else is a breach of the military covenant."

Mr Llwyd said he had been excluded from committee stage of the bill, saying it "smacks of a stitch-up - in the same way as this toothless clause is stitching up veterans".

"There is a mandatory duty on the government to implement the military covenant," he said.

"The last Labour government failed pitifully in this respect and we are still seeing increasing numbers of veterans in prison - maybe as high as at one in nine of the prison population.

"This was an opportunity to put veterans' welfare at the heart of the bill - one that has been badly missed."

He added: "I fear that this government is about to continue in this failure to our troops."

Mr Llwyd said his proposed amendments would force the government "to show whether they are serious about implementing the military covenant".

On Thursday, Royal British Legion director general Chris Simpkins told a committee of MPs that troops found it "pretty depressing" the covenant was not included in the bill as it stands.

A proposal in the bill for the defence secretary to report annually to Parliament on the state of the covenant was no substitute for enshrining the concept in law, he said.

It amounted to "the MoD reporting on itself", Mr Simpkins added.

Research by probation union Napo in 2009 suggested that 6% of prisoners, or those on probation or parole, were ex-servicemen.

Napo assistant general secretary Harry Fletcher said: "The Armed Forces Bill is an excellent opportunity to introduce measures on a statutory footing to minimise the chances of former armed services personnel ending up in the criminal justice system, with mental health problems or becoming homeless."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-politics-12442090

state news financial news Europe news read more news

No comments:

Post a Comment