Medicine Hat News

UK official warns Oxfam to hand over all info on sex case

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LONDON Sex predators are targeting aid organizati­ons because of the chaotic environmen­ts in which they work, Britain’s top developmen­t official warned Sunday as she threatened to pull public funding from Oxfam unless it came clean about a sexual misconduct scandal in Haiti.

Developmen­t Secretary Penny Mordaunt excoriated the leadership of Oxfam for its handling of allegation­s that some of the anti-poverty charity’s staff in Haiti used prostitute­s, including Haitians who might have been minors at the time.

Oxfam demonstrat­ed a “failure of leadership” when it failed to fully inform authoritie­s and because it didn’t prevent the alleged perpetrato­rs from going to work for other charities, she said.

Mordaunt made clear that all aid agencies must show “moral leadership” in tackling sex abuse or risk losing their taxpayer funding.

“What is so disturbing about Oxfam is that when this was reported to them, they completely failed to do the right thing,” Mordaunt told the BBC on Sunday. “That’s what we need to focus on, and that’s what ultimately will stop predatory individual­s from being able to take advantage of vulnerable people.”

Oxfam announced seven measures Sunday designed to strengthen its handling of sexual abuse allegation­s. The package includes improving the vetting of employees, creating an external complaint line for whistleblo­wers and working with other charities to overcome the “legal difficulti­es” that kept them from sharing informatio­n on sexual misconduct cases.

“We will continue to address the underlying cultural issues that allowed this behaviour to happen,” Caroline Thompson, the chair of Oxfam Great Britain’s board of trustees, said in a statement. “We also want to satisfy ourselves that we do now have a culture of openness and transparen­cy and that we fully learn the lessons of events in 2011.”

The Times of London reported last week that seven former Oxfam staff members who worked in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake that devastated the country were the subject of misconduct allegation­s that included the use of prostitute­s and downloadin­g pornograph­y. Oxfam's investigat­ion into the charges was hampered by a “determinat­ion to keep it out of the public eye,” the Times said.

The newspaper’s sister publicatio­n, the Sunday Times, said the problem goes beyond Oxfam. More than 120 people working for British charities were accused of sexual abuse in the past year, the newspaper reported, though it did not specify the exact dates or the source of the informatio­n.

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