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Disabled son of nuclear test veteran seeks answers in MoD medical records

Nuclear veterans descendant Steve Purse, who was born with short stature about a decade after his father, Flight Lieutenant David Purse, served with the RAF in Maralinga, Australia, where British nuclear tests were carried out (Peter Byrne/PA)
Nuclear veterans descendant Steve Purse, who was born with short stature about a decade after his father, Flight Lieutenant David Purse, served with the RAF in Maralinga, Australia, where British nuclear tests were carried out (Peter Byrne/PA)

A disabled man whose father was a nuclear test veteran has said the disclosure of medical records could provide answers he needs for his son.

Steve Purse, 49, was born with short stature about a decade after his father, Flight Lieutenant David Purse, served with the RAF in Maralinga, Australia, where British nuclear tests were carried out.

The father of one, who lives in Prestatyn in Denbighshire, North Wales, told the PA news agency that medical records which he believes are held by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) could provide information which would help his two-year-old son Sascha.

He said: “When I was born it was obvious there was an issue, there was a problem.

“I was taken away from my mum for a few days and the doctors told my dad, basically, that I was disabled.

Nuclear veterans court case
Steve Purse and his son Sascha (Peter Byrne/PA)

“He broke the news to mum, but he said to her ‘I think it’s all my fault, I think it’s linked to my service at Maralinga’.

“Obviously disability can be a chance thing, an act of God, but when you start putting the things together and you’re adding one thing to another you think this is not an act of God, it’s an act of government.”

Flt Lt Purse, who died in 2015, was in charge of the airfield at Maralinga from 1962 to 1963 and told his family he had seen ground zero where nuclear weapons were detonated and that a single-strand wire fence separated the area of the desert classed as contaminated.

Nuclear veterans court case
Flight Lieutenant David Purse serving at Maralinga, Australia, in 1962 and 1963 when nuclear tests were carried out (Family handout/PA)

The condition which Mr Purse was born with is a genetic mutation which is probably unique in the world, he said.

He believes medical records, which could show what his father was exposed to, are needed to start research into conditions which affected veterans and may impact on generations to come.

But despite making a number of applications to different bodies for information from the monitoring programme of servicemen at Maralinga, who had blood and urine samples taken regularly, Mr Purse has not been able to access any information.

“It’s as if the MoD are withholding these records because they’re a bit frightened of what might come out,” he said.

Maralinga airfield terminal in Australia
Maralinga airfield terminal in Australia (Family handout/PA)

The actor, originally from Wirral, Merseyside, said son Sascha was born without disabilities but he worried he may be affected by health problems later on in life.

He said: “You do wonder whether you have played genetic Russian roulette with his life.

“Every headache, every cough, every sneeze from him I’m wondering is this the start of something, is it going to get worse?

“As time goes by I’m going to constantly be thinking what’s his future got and if something awful does happen I’m responsible for that.”

Mr Purse said he hoped launching legal action against the MoD could provide answers.

He added: “If they have withheld information that, a, could have saved lives but, certainly, would have lessened the trauma and would have lessened all the anguish all these families have gone through, then they need to be held accountable for that because they have done that knowingly and willingly.”