Reblogged
from Vox Political:
“The DWP has quietly decided to ditch statistics it used to
collect on the number of deaths of recipients of incapacity benefits (now ESA)
and its predecessors Incapacity Benefit (IB) and Severe Disablement Allowance
(SDA),” according to Liberal
Conspiracy.
The story, by Sunny Hundal, claims: “It is thought the numbers of deaths
has sharply increased since the Coalition government’s severe cuts to social
security benefits.
“But to ensure that deaths aren’t cited as evidence of failure of the
changes, the DWP won’t be collecting and updating its statistics.”
No supporting information is provided and nobody from the Department for Work
and Pensions is quoted. Does this change the chances of success for my Freedom
of Information request, in which I asked for statistics in ESA/IB claimants who
have died?
No. Not at all.
I requested statistics for 2012, which we all know already that the DWP has
collected. They are there; they should be available.
The fact that they aren’t open for inspection is already
incriminating, if you ask me!
My FoI request will be granted in the near future – even if the DWP finds
another reason for refusal, the Information Commissioner’s office will overrule
it. I’ve been through the rules. In this instance, it is Iain Duncan Smith who
doesn’t have a leg to stand on.
If the DWP then claims that it has destroyed the figures – as seems to be
claimed by the Liberal Conspiracy story – then we’ll be looking at a
criminal investigation, I think.
There can only be one reason for hiding the figures – they must have
risen and have not dropped. For the DWP to actually delete them, rather
than allow them to be released, they must have risen sharply.
This would not only indicate the failure of Iain Duncan Smith’s policy –
after everything he and his ministers have said, time and time again, about the
fairness of the assessment regime, and how it is carried out in a humane way,
this would prove that it is neither fair nor humane – and that, given
the opportunity to stop the deaths from accelerating, these Conservative
politicians allowed them to continue.
If a person knows that their actions are causing people to die, and does
nothing about it, then an observer may rightly conclude that this person wants
those deaths to take place. There’s a word for people who cause others to die –
with the intention of causing them to die.
That word is “murderer”.
Or in this case, “mass murderer”.
The net is closing, Iain Duncan Smith.
Nobody will think it is a coincidence, if the DWP really has binned its
statistics on claimant deaths at a time when public interest is focused on the
issue.
And to any DWP interlopers, reading this site because it is on a ‘watch
list’: This is a very dangerous time to be working for that
organisation. People who help others to commit murder are accessories
to the crime and may also be convicted for the offence.
Tick tock, Tory boys…