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Ser2,583
Article Date21-10-2019
Record TYPENews
Article TOPICLegal
Article TitleRomeo Dallaire joining lawsuit against government over anti-malaria drug CTV National News: Landmark lawsuit class action
Article ContentRomeo Dallaire joining lawsuit against government over anti-malaria drug
CTV National News: Landmark lawsuit

Avery Haines, W5
Published Friday, October 18, 2019 10:16PM EDT

VVi 21 Oct 2019 db

OTTAWA -- “I think you are screwing up.” Blunt words from a Canadian military hero, retired general Romeo Dallaire, to the Canadian government and Department of National Defence.

W5: Canadian soldiers allege anti-malaria medication left them with intense rage, suicidal ideations
In a W5 exclusive, Dallaire announced that he is joining a lawsuit against the Canadian government and Defence Department over an anti-malaria drug that he, and other soldiers , were forced to take on missions to Rwanda, Somalia and Afghanistan.

Retired general and former senator Romeo Dallaire speaks to W5 about the lawsuit over the anti-malaria drug Mefloquine.

Dallaire, who led the international peacekeeping mission in Rwanda in 1994, has become the highest ranking soldier to join an unprecedented legal action by veterans over the use of the anti-malaria drug Mefloquine. He joins nearly 900 other veterans who claim the Canadian government and Department of National Defence “willfully ignored and concealed the risks” of the drug, which is marketed under the brand name Lariam.

Dallaire has been hailed a hero, both for his attempts to stop the genocide in Rwanda, but also for his outspoken admission that he struggles with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. In the W5 documentary “The Guinea Pig Soldiers” (airing Saturday night at 7 p.m. on CTV), Dallaire said the drug Mefloquine made it difficult for him to do his job in Rwanda: “It was an impact that I considered serious enough that it was affecting my operational capability.” When the general requested he be taken off the drug, he was threatened: “They told me that if I did not continue to take Mefloquine, it would be perceived as a self-inflected wound. And I could be court-martialed.” That could have meant jail time for a Canadian general leading an international peacekeeping mission.

Veterans of missions to Somalia, Rwanda and Afghanistan allege that the drug has left them with long-term and debilitating side-effects that mimic PTSD but include tinnitus, memory loss, paranoia, extreme rage, suicidal ideation and rage. Lawyer Paul Miller, with the Toronto firm Howie, Sacks and Henry, is leading the legal action and says having Dallaire sign on is a game changer: "If a general is suffering from something like this, then the everyday soldier has confidence to know that they can join. There is credibility to the condition that they are suffering from.”

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Supplement 
Eval SOURCE RELIABILITYC - Fairly Reliable
Eval INFO CREDIBILITY1 - Cfm Other Source
COMPONENTVAC
SourceCTV
Source URLhttps://www.ctvnews.ca/w5/romeo-dallaire-joining-lawsuit-against-government-over-anti-malaria-drug-1.4645769?fbclid=IwAR0na3c62HTrSCdcRDGP0Up7RmszbJrH2D5q-y68S0ThMNNPLID2Kn5vnC8
Related External Link 
Additional Link 
Periodical Issue21-10-2019
Periodical No 
VVi ContributorCJ
ACTION GENERALOn-Going