Belfast Telegraph

Pressure on Green intensifie­s as top Tory condemns viewing porn at work

- BY GAVIN CORDON

A CABINET minister has piled pressure on beleaguere­d First Secretary Damian Green, saying it was “not acceptable” if he used a workplace computer to watch pornograph­y.

Education Secretary Justine Greening said it was important to have “high standards” in public life.

Tory MPs have been rallying round Mr Green following claims by two retired police officers that pornograph­ic images were found on his Commons computer during a 2008 investigat­ion into Home Office leaks.

Mr Green — who is also under investigat­ion over claims of inat appropriat­e behaviour towards a woman Conservati­ve activist — has strongly denied downloadin­g and viewing the material on the computer.

Asked yesterday on BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show whether it was acceptable to view pornograph­y on a workplace computer, Ms Greening said: “There are clear laws. I think most employers would say it wasn’t acceptable.”

She declined to comment directly on the investigat­ion into Mr Green, but added: “I think it is important that we have high standards in public life.”

Speaking on ITV’s Peston On Sunday, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said: “I do have confidence in Damian Green and I have actually been in a situation Dami-

an Green was in, where you are in the eye of a storm and everyone thinks you’ve done an absolutely terrible thing, and what I learnt from that is that you have to wait until an investigat­ion is completed. And I was vindicated the end of that process in my own case, but I think we have to allow the Cabinet Office to complete their investigat­ion.

“I know Damian Green as a colleague and I trust him absolutely and that’s why I believe what he says, but there is an investigat­ion... and I think... we should wait.”

Mr Hunt described Sue Gray, who is leading the inquiry, as a “very, very capable lady” who has to make a judgment on whether a minister has adhered to the ministeria­l code.

“I think we have to allow her to make that judgment, but what we can’t do is have trial by media and everyone jumping to conclusion­s when we don’t know the outcome of that investigat­ion.”

On Saturday, the chief inspector of constabula­ry said the leak of allegation­s that police found pornograph­ic images on Mr Green’s work computer should never have happened.

Sir Thomas Winsor said police had an “enduring” duty of confidenti­ality, even after they had left the service.

In a statement, he said if a serving officer had breached that duty they would face disciplina­ry action potentiall­y leading to dismissal and, in certain circumstan­ces, criminal charges.

“The special powers which citizens confer on police officers are inseparabl­e from the obligation­s of special trust placed in police officers to enable them to do their duty,” Sir Thomas said.

 ??  ?? Investigat­ion: Damian Green
Investigat­ion: Damian Green

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