Here:
Paralympic gold medallist and world record holder
Tara Flood faces a test that could see her lose her disability benefits, she
told Socialist Worker. [I know,
but whose fault is it that she has nowhere else to go?] Tara is a
seven-time Paralympic medallist. In 1992 she set a world record for 50 metres
breaststroke that still stands today. But that hasn’t saved her from the
Tories’ harsh benefits clampdown. “I’ve already had my letter,” she said. “At
some point next year it will be my turn to be assessed.”
Tara is one of hundreds of thousands of people in
the Tories’ sights as they try to slash benefits for sick and disabled people.
She said that receiving Disability Living Allowance made a huge difference to
her everyday life. “Without it I wouldn’t be able to get out of the house,” she
said. “It’s a fundamental benefit, not linked to work.”
As the Paralympics begin, Tara pointed out the
government’s hypocrisy. “They’re calling us scroungers and benefit cheats at
the same time as they celebrate the Paralympics,” she said. “It’s like disabled
people are either elite athletes or workshy scroungers.” Tara spoke out on a
protest against Atos, the private firm that carries out humiliating assessments
to decide who gets benefits and who doesn’t.
Incredibly, Atos is an official sponsor of the
Paralympics. “Atos destroys disabled people’s lives,” Tara said. “It gets me so
angry. It is carrying out a government contract and a government agenda to
punish disabled people for the financial crisis. It’s no coincidence that hate
crime against disabled people has increased massively since the coalition
government came in.”
But Tara added that this week’s action against
Atos could encourage more resistance against the Tories. “It’s a scary time,”
she said. “But there’s a growing backlash against the government’s right wing
agenda. So many people who would never have gone out and protested before are
saying enough is enough.”
Want to get a ticket to the Paralympics? If
you’re a wheelchair user, it could cost more than you think. The only way to
get wheelchair tickets is to wait on hold on a premium rate number—at a cost of
up to 41p per minute.
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