Calgary Herald

Britain suspends Oxfam funding

- Jill lawless

• The British government on Friday suspended new funding to aid agency Oxfam, which had some staff accused of sexually exploiting people in crisis zones. The group’s chief called the allegation­s “a stain” that shames the organizati­on.

Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Penny Mordaunt said Oxfam had agreed not to bid for further U.K. taxpayer funds until it met the British government’s “high standards.”

“Clearly Oxfam have a long way to go before they can regain the trust of the British public, their staff and the people they aim to help,” she said. “The actions and attitude of the organizati­on over the coming weeks will be critical.”

Oxfam received $55.8 million from the British government in 2016-17, out of some $700 million in total income.

U.K.-based Oxfam has been rocked by allegation­s that senior staff working in Haiti after the country’s 2010 earthquake faced misconduct allegation­s, including using prostitute­s and downloadin­g pornograph­y.

Oxfam says it investigat­ed the case, fired four workers and let three others resign, but the British government and charity regulators have criticized its lack of transparen­cy.

Mordaunt said the government had asked Oxfam and other recipients of aid funding for assurances about their “safeguardi­ng and reporting practices” by Feb. 26.

She said Oxfam had already agreed to report the accused staff members to their respective government­s and to hand over all evidence it held on the allegation­s to the Haitian government.

She said “hundreds of good, brave and compassion­ate people working for Oxfam around the world” had been “poorly served by Oxfam’s leadership team.”

Oxfam Internatio­nal executive director Winnie Byanyima said she was deeply sorry for the allegation­s about staff in Haiti, and also in Chad.

“What happened in Haiti and afterwards is a stain on Oxfam that will shame us for years, and rightly so,” Byanyima said.

She said she was appointing an independen­t commission to “look into our culture and our practices” and set up a vetting system for its staff. Byanyima urged all victims of abuse to come forward.

“I’m here for all the women who have been abused. I want them to come forward and for justice to be done for them,” she told the BBC.

The scandal is a major blow to Oxfam, which relies on public and corporate donations as well as government funding.

South African Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu, British actress Minnie Driver and Senegalese musician Baaba Maal have all resigned as Oxfam celebrity ambassador­s since the sexual misconduct allegation­s and Britain’s charity regulator has launched an investigat­ion.

The allegation­s relate to Oxfam GB, one 20 affiliates that make up Oxfam Internatio­nal.

Mark Goldring, chief executive of Oxfam GB, admitted the organizati­on needed to reform, but said “the scale and the intensity of the attacks feels out of proportion to the level of culpabilit­y.”

He told The Guardian, “The intensity and ferocity of the attack makes you wonder, what did we do? We murdered babies in their cots?”

 ?? WENN ORG ?? An Oxfam store in north London. The embattled charity won’t be receiving funding from the British government amidst allegation­s of staff sex exploitati­on in Haiti.
WENN ORG An Oxfam store in north London. The embattled charity won’t be receiving funding from the British government amidst allegation­s of staff sex exploitati­on in Haiti.

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