Thalidomide survivors to receive $125,000 lump sum payment each
'We are extremely disappointed. It is a slap in the face,' mother of one survivor says
The federal government is offering a $125,000 lump-sum payment to each of Canada's thalidomide victims, but the family of one survivor says it isn't enough.
Health Minister Rona Ambrose says the money is tax free and intended to cover urgent health-care needs.
The long-awaited compensation package also includes a total of up to $168 million for ongoing medical assistance based on individual circumstances.
"I would like to express heartfelt sympathy and great regret for the decades of tremendous suffering and personal struggle that exposure to thalidomide has inflicted on survivors and their loved ones," Ambrose told a news conference in Edmonton Friday.
"No regret or sympathy and no amount of financial support can ever undo what happened.
"However, today we are announcing support that will help ensure that survivors receive the care they need to live the rest of their lives with dignity."
Ambrose said the support package would meet the needs of the 95 victims still believed to be living who are now in their mid-50s.
'We need assistance'
Mercédes Benegbi, executive director of Thalidomide Victims Association of Canada, told CBC's Peter Armstrong that she heard the news only shortly before the official announcement.
She said the association is reviewing the government's response to see if it will meet the long-term needs of the people it's meant to serve and will present the government with some questions about process, eligibility and oversight next week.
The association had initially asked for a higher lump sum payment. Benegbi told CBC's As It Happens the organization needs to review the overall package before commenting on the payment proposal, but she said the survivors need more help as they get older.
"Our life right now, for many of us, is misery, and we need assistance," she said, adding that many thalidomide victims are suffering from pain and ailments that force them to seek out assistance for everyday activities.
'Extremely disappointed'
The mother of one severely disabled survivor was angry.
Anne Marie Bainbridge, 75, said her daughter Bernadette was expecting a payment of $250,000 — money the family needs to ensure that she can be properly looked after in the years to come.
"We are extremely disappointed. It is a slap in the face," Bainbridge said from her home in Whitby, Ont. "Ms. Ambrose should be thoroughly ashamed of herself."
Bainbridge said Bernadette, 52, suffered brain damage. The entire right side of her body was paralyzed. She has no right ear and deformed hands.
"I am just thoroughly disgusted with the way this has been handled."
Thalidomide was a government-approved anti-nausea drug prescribed to pregnant women in the 1950s and 1960s.
Children of those mothers were born with a range of problems including missing or malformed limbs, deafness, blindness, disfigurement and other disabilities.
Survivors were provided with compensation from Ottawa in 1991, but have long said it wasn't enough.
The House of Commons unanimously supported a New Democrat motion of support for the victims late last year.
With a file from CBC News