20 victims of 7/7 blasts still waiting for payout
Martin Bentham, Home Affairs Editor04.07.08
Twenty victims of the 7/7 London bombings have yet to receive a penny, and more than 70 cases have still to be fully settled three years after the attacks, the Evening Standard can reveal.
Figures obtained from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority also show that 18 applicants are appealing over the size of their awards.
The disclosures follow the call by Mayor Boris Johnson for payments to be accelerated and will raise questions about the level of payments and the speed of processing.
Officials insist, however, the performance of the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority, which has been criticised in the past by MPs and victims, has improved. They point out that 27 applications have been received in the last 12 months - after the official deadline for claims expired - and that, apart from three claims which have been rejected, virtually everyone seeking compensation has received an offer.
Today's new figures show that 73 cases relating to the 7/7 bombings are outstanding, 46 of which were lodged prior to last year's second anniversary.
In 19 of these cases, a final offer of payment has been made and officials are waiting to hear if the claimants - of whom 12 have received interim payments - are willing to accept. Of the remaining 50 cases, 37 have received or been offered an interim payment, but 13 have still to receive any cash.
Six of these have only recently submitted claims, while of the other seven, three have been rejected. The other four victims have been made an offer but have yet to take any money.
A further four claims have been suspended because contact has been lost with the applicant, although these could be re-activated.
That means of the 20 yet to receive a penny, 11 have been made an offer, six are recent claimants, while the others have been deemed to be ineligible.
Among the reasons for the failure to resolve the other outstanding cases is the absence of supporting evidence from police or medical documentation.
In many of the cases where an interim payment has been made, the reason for a lack of full settlement is that it remains unclear what the long-term consequences - and costs - of the relevant injury might be.
Overall, today's figures show £7.5 million has been paid out and a further £1 million has been offered in compensation with 574 of the 647 applications now settled in full.
The maximum payment under the compensation scheme is £500,000. The Criminal Injuries Compensation Authoritysaid it was continuing to resolve the remaining cases as swiftly as possible.
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I am in despair. When the inevitable disgusting atrocity occurred on July 7 I knew that the entire nation would rise and show these misguided and malevolent barbarians how a civilized community would respond. Unsurprisingly the very best of the natural British character - all ages, all sexes, all colours – rushed to help. They went to the aid of others without calculating the possible cost to their lives and well-being. They simply did the best they could.
In my pathetic naivety one of my first thoughts, after the initial horror, was that the government would aid all those who suffered loss or injury with no effort or expense spared and without delay. That would show everyone who would attempt to cow us how we stood together in times of crisis. I need not have concerned myself. The minions of state took immediate control of the situation and ensured that we would show our mettle by treating everyone involved as if they had tripped over a paving-stone. This would show our enemies that it would take much more than the death and mutilation of hundreds of innocent people to throw the engine of state off its stately, unbending rails. I really, really did think that Tony Blair would say to someone in his organization – ‘Get to it. Now’.
I cannot understand how he and his associates were able to remain oblivious to the suffering of all the hundreds involved, and not ensure that everything was being done to help them. Obviously they could and, indeed, still can.
- Alan Wenman, Ruislip, UK









