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4 Mar 2008 : Column WA165
Written Answers
Tuesday 4 March 2008
Armed Forces: Healthcare
Lord Astor of Hever asked Her Majesty's Government:
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health (Lord Darzi of Denham): All veterans are now entitled to priority treatment in the National Health Service on the same basis that veterans with war pensions have enjoyed since the 1950s.
There is, as yet, no system for automatically tracking veterans. The Government have received the report of the Defence Select Committee (Medical Care for the Armed Forces, HC 327, February 2008) and will be responding to the recommendations, including that there should be a system for automatically tracking veterans, in due course.
Armed Forces: Oil Prices
Lord Astor of Hever asked Her Majesty's Government:
What assumptions they are making about the world oil price in budgeting for the Armed Forces for the coming financial year. [HL2139]
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of Defence (Baroness Taylor of Bolton): Our fuel price projections for the financial year 2008-09 currently assume an average price of $83 per barrel for Brent crude. This is kept under regular review.
Armed Forces: Royal Fleet Auxiliary
Lord MacKenzie of Culkein asked Her Majesty's Government:
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of Defence (Baroness Taylor of Bolton): The following Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) vessels are no longer in fleet's operational cycle:
RFA Brambleleafawaiting disposal;RFA Grey Roverawaiting disposal;RFA Oakleafawaiting disposal;RFA Sir Percivaleawaiting disposal; and RFA Sir Tristramtraining platform.Armenia: Genocide
Baroness Finlay of Llandaff asked Her Majesty's Government:
The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The position of the Government on this issue is long-standing. The
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As my right honourable friend the then Minister for Europe (Geoffrey Hoon) said in a debate in Westminster Hall on 7 June 2006 (Official Report, col. 137WH), the work of establishing the truth must be conducted as a joint exercise by the parties directly involved if it is to help towards reconciliation. There needs to be a truth and reconciliation process owned by the people of Armenia and Turkey. Outsiders can commend the idea to the parties, but they should not try to do the work for themundertaking this is an important part of the confidence-building and reconciliation process for the parties themselves. The Government will continue to encourage the parties to embark on such a process. In the mean time, we should resist the temptation to pre-empt its conclusions.
Cyprus
Lord Faulkner of Worcester asked Her Majesty's Government:
What investigations they are undertaking into the purchase by British nationals of property, the title of which is disputed, in the Turkish-occupied sector of Cyprus; and what representations they have made to the Turkish Cypriot authorities on these matters.[HL1946]
The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The Government are not undertaking any investigations into potentially disputed property bought by British citizens in northern Cyprus. However, in response to inquires from members of the public, and through our travel advice on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office website (www.fco.gove. uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1007029390590&a=KCountry Advice&aid=1013618387279), we strongly advise anyone thinking of purchasing property in the northern part of Cyprus to seek independent legal advice before buying any land or property. We also highlight the risks associated with buying property in the northern part of Cyprus.
In our contacts with the leaders of the Turkish Cypriot community, we recognise the Turkish Cypriots' need for economic development in support of reunification. But we urge them to ensure that any property development that takes place does so in a manner that is both environmentally sustainable and does not complicate an eventual solution. Ultimately we believe that the difficult issue of property is likely to be fully resolved only in the context of a comprehensive settlement. We continue to urge both sides to engage constructively with the United Nations and to show the political will necessary to make decisive progress towards a comprehensive settlement in 2008.
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Former Yugoslavia: International Criminal Tribunal
Lord Lester of Herne Hill asked Her Majesty's Government:
What action they are taking to ensure that Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic are transferred to face trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia for genocide and crimes against humanity.[HL1936]
The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The UK has given full and consistent support, both practical and political, to the work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). We remain committed to seeing all four outstanding ICTY indictees, including Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, arrested and brought to trial before the tribunal. This is a message that we constantly deliver in the region, particularly to the authorities in Serbia which have a key role to play in this regard.
Lord Lester of Herne Hill asked Her Majesty's Government:
Whether they will join the Governments of the Netherlands and Belgium in making the transfer of Ratko Mladic to face trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia a condition of the European Union signing a stabilisation and association agreement with Serbia.[HL1937]
Lord Malloch-Brown: The UK is committed to seeing all four outstanding International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) indictees, including Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, arrested and brought to trial before the tribunal. The UK has given full and consistent support, both practical and political, to ICTY's work.
The EU General Affairs and External Relations Council conclusions of June 2007 recalled that the pace and conclusion of the negotiations on the stabilisation and association agreement (SAA) would depend on Serbia's full co-operation with ICTY. There is currently no consensus within the EU that the necessary conditions have been met for SAA signature.
The Government's position is that the political process must move forward in a way that upholds ICTY conditionality and ensures that this remains embedded in the accession process. The Government would be readyin the interest of sending a clear signal of EU commitment to Serbia's European futureto contemplate signature of an SAA if there were clear agreement that ICTY conditionality were to remain clearly embedded in the accession process and to apply at the next relevant stage. A further relevant consideration is Serbia's response to developments in Kosovo. Violence against international personnel in Kosovo or against diplomatic premises in Belgrade, and statements by Serbian Ministers that condone this, clearly create an unpromising background for progress in the EU's relations with Serbia.
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Health: Cardiac Rehabilitation
Lord MacKenzie of Culkein asked Her Majesty's Government:
What percentage of patients with myocardial infarction or revascularisation or both are not offered a place on a cardiac rehabilitation programme; and [HL2074]
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health (Lord Darzi of Denham): Chapter 7 of the Coronary Heart Disease National Service Framework, published in March 2000, issued appropriate guidance to the National Health Service about the provision of cardiac rehabilitation services. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) clinical guideline 48, MI:Secondary Prevention, was subsequently issued in May 2007. This provided updated guidance to the NHS on secondary prevention in primary and secondary care for patients following heart attack and emphasised the importance of rehabilitation for these patients.
Implementation of guidance is a matter for the local NHS, working in partnership with stakeholders and the local community. It is for NHS organisations to plan and develop services based on their specific local knowledge and expertise.
The department does not collect information centrally about the numbers of cardiac rehabilitation programmes within the NHS or numbers of eligible patients to whom services are offered. However, the British Heart Foundation and the British Association of Cardiac Rehabilitation maintain a voluntary register of cardiac rehabilitation programmes, which holds details of around 340 programmes. Further details can be found on their website at www.cardiac-rehabilitation.net/
Health: Macular Degeneration
Lord Morris of Manchester asked Her Majesty's Government:
Whether they will review the decision of Torbay District General Hospital to deny former serviceman Mr Jack Tagg, who has been diagnosed with wet macular degeneration, a course of Lucentis on the ground of cost. [HL2031]
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health (Lord Darzi of Denham): This is a matter for Torbay Care Trust. Decisions to fund treatments are made by primary care trusts (PCTs) in consultation with the healthcare professionals who are best placed to decide on the most appropriate treatments for their patients.
I am sorry to hear that Mr Tagg has been diagnosed with wet macular degeneration. South West Strategic Health Authority (SHA) has advised that Torbay Care Trust is satisfied that Mr Tagg has been properly assessed and treated throughout. I
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The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) is currently appraising ranibizumab (Lucentis) and expects to publish final guidance later in 2008. The department has made it clear that it is not acceptable for funding for licensed treatments to be withheld from patients simply because NICE has not issued final guidance on them. In these circumstances, PCTs are expected to take full account of the available evidence when reaching funding decisions.
South West SHA has advised that Torbay Care Trust has established local clinical criteria for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration. These have been produced by a team from across Devon, including consultant ophthalmologists from three hospitals, together with local expertise.
Health: Workforce Planning
Lord MacKenzie of Culkein asked Her Majesty's Government:
Whether workforce planning is sufficiently robust to plan properly for the future needs of the National Health Service and the independent health sector. [HL2073]
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health (Lord Darzi of Denham): The National Health Service next stage review, led by Lord Darzi, includes a workforce planning, education and training work stream. The programme of work, which is due to be completed in the spring of 2008 is tackling the question of how workforce planning should be done in the future to deliver a supply of trainees and a workforce of the right size and structure.
The review will make recommendations about the future roles and responsibilities in workforce planning of the department, strategic health authorities, primary care trusts and service providers, which will include both NHS and non-NHS providers.
Immigration: Georgia
Lord Campbell-Savours asked Her Majesty's Government:
How many United Kingdom entry clearance officers there are in Georgia; what are their grades; where they are located; and for how long each has been in post.[HL1954]
The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The complement of staff at our embassy in Tbilisi includes three UK entry clearance officers: the deputy head of mission, a third secretary and a member of the UK support staff. Respectively, they have spent five months, three years and six months at post. The embassy in Tbilisi is our only representation in Georgia.
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Lord Campbell-Savours asked Her Majesty's Government:
How many staff there are in support of entry clearance officers in Georgia; and what are their nationalities.[HL1955]
Lord Malloch-Brown: There are two members of local staff working in support of UK entry clearance officers at our embassy in Tbilisi. Both have Georgian nationality.
Lord Campbell-Savours asked Her Majesty's Government:
How many applications have been received from applicants within Georgia by nationality for visas for access to the United Kingdom within each of the last three years.[HL1956]
Lord Malloch-Brown: In the three years from January 2005 to December 2007, a total of 13,982 visa applications were received by our embassy in Tbilisi. The breakdown by year is as follows:
20054,164 applications, of which 4,055 were received from Georgian nationals and 109 from other nationalities;20064,610 applications, of which 4,467 were received from Georgian nationals and 143 from other nationalities; and 20075,208 applications, of which 5,059 were received from Georgian nationals and 149 from other nationalities.Of the non-Georgians, applications were received from nationals of some 38 other countries. The largest number of applications, though small in comparison with many of those to our other embassies, came from nationals of Armenia, China, India, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Russia and Turkey.
Lord Campbell-Savours asked Her Majesty's Government:
How many visas for entry into the United Kingdom have been granted without appeal to an asylum and immigration tribunal to Georgian nationals in the last three years. [HL1957]
Lord Malloch-Brown: In the three years from January 2005 to December 2007, a total of 12,550 visas were issued to Georgian nationals without appeal to an asylum and immigration tribunal. The annual figures are as follows:
These figures include, of course, applications made at our missions other than our embassy in Tbilisi.
Immigration: Vietnamese Children
Lord Hylton asked Her Majesty's Government:
Whether any Vietnamese children in the United Kingdom have been convicted of drug or immigration offences. [HL1992]
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Ministry of Justice (Lord Hunt of Kings Heath): Details relating to the nationality of the defendants are not required for criminal cases in England and Wales unless they involve an immigration offence. Therefore, nationality information is not routinely collected by the courts or reported to the Ministry of Justice; detailed information is held by the courts only on individual case files.
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