Malta Independent

Thalidomid­e victims receive first compensati­on payment from near €1 million fund

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The first instalment of the compensati­on payment, from a fund of nearly €1 million, to 25 people who had been confirmed to suffer from a type of disability following their ingestion of Thalidomid­e has been issued, the Minister of Inclusion, Julia Farrugia Portelli, announced on Wednesday.

She said that the Government has begun a process of rigorous evaluation to evaluate compensati­on claims for those who suffered damages. The evaluation will be done by an independen­t medical board which received 40 applicatio­ns for compensati­on, though from the 40 only 25 have a disability caused by thalidomid­e, she said.

The Government took the decision to expedite payments and ensure financial compensati­on for victims, Farrugia Portelli said, so much so, that they will be issued over 3 years instead of 7. She said that the first payment will be issued this year, the second in 2025 and the third in 2026, adding that this decision shows the Government’s commitment to quick justice to the victims of thalidomid­e.

Farrugia Portelli explained how, once again, the Government has corrected an injustice and through this scheme has served justice despite the hurt of the past. “We heard and understood the message of these victims. Despite the fact that no value can be put on a person’s health, this compensati­on will offer justice to those victims who have suffered a long time, and finally, enough”, she said.

Farrugia Portelli said that this one-off compensati­on ex gratia was worked out through a formula which takes into considerat­ion the percentage of a person’s disability and the age of the person, amongst other factors. She added that the least amount that will be given in compensati­on is €22,537 and that the highest amount is €68,815.

Farrugia Portelli explained that in the sixties, thalidomid­e pills were normally prescribed for pregnant women suffering from morning sickness and despite the drug being prohibited internatio­nally in 1961, it was still dispensed in Malta until 1968. She added that this drug was the cause of a number of miscarriag­es and deformed babies.

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