Asbestos saga a human tragedy.THE timing could hardly have been worse for all concerned. Just as Knowsley Council declared it would fight to the bitter end to the last extremity, however calamitous. See also: Bitter not to compensate Dianne Willmore for the crippling illness she said she contracted as a result of asbestos exposure back in the 1970s, she died as a result of the illness. The High Court and later the Appeal Court had both ruled in favour of Mrs Willmore, awarding her pounds 240,000 in compensation. Her case was about to be referred to the newly-constituted Supreme Court, with Knowsley announcing its intention to fight her every inch of the way. Links between asbestos exposure and a number of serious lung diseases have been hypothesised for nearly a century now. There has been a rising tide Noun 1. rising tide - the occurrence of incoming water (between a low tide and the following high tide); "a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune" -Shakespeare flood tide, flood of compensation claims for illnesses caused by asbestos, for the most part in this country, America and elsewhere settled in favour of the claimants. But still defendants, be they in the public or private sector, have resisted claims as long and as hard as they can. A lot of it is to do with the emotionless figures underlying the asbestos claims. Multiply the pounds 240,000 awarded to Mrs Willmore by the number of cases being brought, and the costs look potentially astronomical. Insurance companies have long taken fright, with money set aside for settling asbestos claims already making inroads inroads Noun, pl make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings inroads npl to make inroads into [+ into their balance sheets. And for local authorities who have chosen to self-insure for asbestos claims, the bill ultimately will be met by the taxpayers. But while accountants, actuaries and lawyers have to think the unthinkable Think the Unthinkable is an audience sitcom about hapless management consultants, written by James Cary and first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 2001. It starred Marcus Brigstocke, David Mitchell, Catherine Shepherd, Emma Kennedy and Beth Chalmers. , we must not lose sight of the fact that the asbestos saga of the last half-century and more is, above all, a human tragedy. |
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