Published on Wednesday 2 May 2012 12:10
ONE of the Capital’s best-known writers was driven to suicide by the Government’s welfare reforms, a doctor has claimed.
Dr Stephen Carty, a Leith GP, told the welfare reform committee yesterday that letters informing Paul Reekie, right, his incapacity and housing benefits would be stopped were used as the suicide note of the iconoclastic poet and author.
Dr Carty said: “Paul Reekie took his life following a work capability assessment. He didn’t leave a suicide note. He left on his desk two letters. One was a letter from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) informing him his incapacity benefit had been stopped and the other was from the council informing him his housing benefits had stopped.”
Mr Reekie – a contemporary of Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh in the early 1990s – died aged 48 at his Leith home in June 2010. He is believed to have had a heart condition and suffered from depression.
Dr Carty is a member of the Black Triangle Campaign – a group set up to fight the Government’s welfare reforms.
He told the welfare reform committee he had been “staggered” by the DWP’s decision to judge people “who are clearly severely ill” fit for work. He also called computer-based work assessments “inadequate”.
Dr David Bell, of BMA Scotland, called £2 billion in projected savings from the reform “inhumane and unreasonable” and said: “The frequency of successful appeals seems to demonstrate the shortcomings of the mechanism. You would not have 60 per cent plus success on appeal if the system was working properly.”
Mr Reekie grew up in Leslie, Fife, and moved to Edinburgh at the age of 16 to train as a radio officer at Leith Nautical College.
He reached probably his widest audience when his poem When Caesar’s Mushroom is in Season was published on the frontispiece of Welsh’s short story collection, The Acid House.
Related Articles
-
Just not working: Why government fit-to-work tests are failing
Tests introduced by the government two years ago in a bid to cut benefit fraud are not fit for purpose,say organisers of a campaign, based in Edinburgh, formed to fight them. Here, Jane Bradley talks to the campaign leaders, including a Leith GP who has many cases where he believes the assessments got it badly wrong
-
Obituary: Paul Reekie, poet, 48
PAUL Reekie, an iconoclastic poet, writer and musician, has died at the age of 48.
-
Author’s suicide ‘due to slash in benefits’
FRIENDS of an acclaimed Scottish writer have accused the new government’s crackdown on welfare benefits of being a factor in his suicide.
2 Responses
It’s disgusting that Paul Reekie like 100’s and 1000’s of others are being driven to such desparation. All the creative work which Paul Reekie has done has been overshadowed by his horrific death, and that’s another insult to injury which ATOS and DWP have inflicted on this talented writer. The DWP and ATOS are thieves stealing Paul Reekies life and literary legacy.
well done doctor carty you are the best we all behind you for justice