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Tony Blair backs phone masts, with terrible consequences for 12 year old epileptic Nicola Packard who has to stay out of school
United Kingdom Created: 6 Oct 2005
Tony Blair backs phone and Tetra masts, with terrible consequences for little epileptic Nicola Packard.

Nicola will have to have tuition at her home, and she will loose her friends at school, and will be isolated and cut off from social contact with the other children.

The Prime Minister dismissed public concerns about mobile phone masts by insisting they were safe and the Government had no plans to stop them going up.

Quote 1):"Because otherwise you alarm people wholly unnecessarily, and you do a GREAT DEAL OF DAMAGE TO BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY".

Quote 2). He added: "The reason we have not gone and banned mobile phones, or banned the masts is that there isn't the evidence to justify it at the
present time"

Published in Birmingham Post, 9 May 2005 .By Jonathan Walker Birmingham Post March 9 2005.

But what are the consequences of his actions for Nicola Packard?

The 12-year-old girl with epilepsy will have to be taught at home after claims a police radio mast near her Haverfordwest school made her condition worse.
Nicola Packard's mother Jayne has ended a claim against Pembrokeshire Council after it agreed to help with tuition.

It was claimed a Tetra mast was causing Nicola to fit but the council said its decision did not mean there was a link.
Dyfed-Powys Police said there was no scientific proof that the masts could affect people with epilepsy.

The mast at Haverfordwest Police Station, part of a Wales-wide upgrade in emergency service communication, was switched on in May despite protests from locals.

Nicolas mother Mrs. Jayne Packard said: " If Nicola is being affected by the mast being there she is one child too many"

Mrs Packard, of Hakin, near Milford Haven said: "Nicola has not been on any medication for quite a few years and her fits were quite well controlled to just one or two a month. "But since the Tetra mast is on while she has been in school she has been having a lot more seizures."

Mrs Packard has kept Nicola from attending Portfield Special School this term because of her condition.

"I do want her ultimately to return to Portfield School because I have to say it's an excellent school and Nicola loves going there.
"For all I know she could be the only child being affected but if Nicola is being affected by the mast being there she is one child too many."

The mast at Haverfordwest Police Station was turned on in May
Mrs Packard added: "The education department has come to an agreement that they will offer Nicola home tuition up until a time that she is able to go back.

Pembrokeshire Council said it did not mean it accepted there was a link.
"In accordance with normal practice for children - and following comprehensive discussions with her mother - we have sought to offer a range of provision, which in this instance includes an element of home tuition," it said.
"This is a pragmatic response to ensure that the individual child is provided with suitable education."

In a statement Dyfed-Powys Police said: "At the moment there is no definitive scientific evidence or proof that a wave-based station can affect people who are susceptible to epilepsy."

Mast operator O2 Airwave said: "Our equipment in Haverfordwest is fully compliant with all national and international guidelines - indeed the level of exposure at the nearest part of any school is 1/3000th of those guidelines."

Link to article at BBC news:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/south_west/4285938.stm
Click here to view the source article.
Source: BBC News online, 27 sept. 2005

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