Business Day

Tutu quits scandal-hit Oxfam

• Archbishop disappoint­ed by claims of immorality linked to charity

- Agency Staff Brussels

The former Oxfam director at the heart of a sex abuse scandal said on Thursday he made mistakes when working in Haiti but denied paying for sex with prostitute­s or abusing minors.

In his first response to allegation­s over his conduct, Roland Van Hauwermeir­en said in an open letter to a broadcaste­r in his native Belgium he did not want to cast himself as a victim but feared that Oxfam, other aid workers and those they help would suffer from false claims.

As outrage spread over the scandal, Archbishop Desmond Tutu announced that he had quit his role as an ambassador for Oxfam, AFP reported.

“The archbishop is deeply disappoint­ed by allegation­s of immorality and possible criminalit­y involving humanitari­an workers linked to the charity,” according to a statement from his office in SA.

In the four-page letter, Van Hauwermeir­en accused an unnamed former employee of being the source of reports that have shaken the global humanitari­an community and prompted Britain and the EU to review funding for Oxfam.

“I am not a saint. I am a man of flesh and blood I have made mistakes and I am DEEPLY ASHAMED,” the 68-year-old former soldier wrote in Dutch to broadcaste­r VTM.

He said he resigned after the 2010 Haiti earthquake because he had failed to exercise sufficient control over staff accused of sexual misconduct. But he denied any wrongdoing himself, saying he never organised “sex parties” or visited brothels.

He acknowledg­ed having had a brief sexual relationsh­ip at his Oxfam house with a local woman whom he met after giving her younger sister milk powder and nappies for her child. He denied giving the woman money but said the liaison “fuelled rumours” and had left his leadership and Oxfam “compromise­d”.

The letter also dealt with allegation­s about his conduct in Liberia in 2004. He acknowledg­ed he was fired after attending a party where two prostitute­s were present, although he said he had only “danced and flirted” with them. He said rumours of aid staff paying for sex in Chad in 2006 were “complete nonsense”.

Complainin­g of “slander”, he said he believed reports were based on allegation­s by a man he fired in Liberia for drunkennes­s and abusing staff. “I feel I have done wrong, but not in the way that some media are reporting,” Van Hauwermeir­en wrote, adding: “These allegation­s are destroying me and I no longer dare to appear in public or speak to my family and children.”

Earlier, he spoke to reporters from De Standaard newspaper who had called at his apartment near the Belgian coast. He told them his account would make the media “blush with shame”.

“It is not that I deny everything,” he told the paper. “There are things which have been described correctly. But there are many lies and exaggerati­ons. Parties every week? Fancy villas? Women paid with money from the organisati­on?”

Reuters could not reach Van Hauwermeir­en for direct comment. A spokeswoma­n for Oxfam declined to comment on his letter or reported remarks.

Oxfam has neither confirmed nor denied the accounts reported in the media but has said an internal investigat­ion in 2011 confirmed sexual misconduct occurred and it has apologised.

Haitian Justice Minister Heidi Fortune said on Wednesday he had asked Belgium for help in starting legal action against Van Hauwermeir­en, without specifying which laws might have been broken. The Belgian justice ministry said on Thursday it had not received such a request.

 ?? /The Times ?? Cutting ties: Desmond Tutu, one of the prominent global ambassador­s of Oxfam, says he is deeply disappoint­ed by sex abuse allegation­s against a former director.
/The Times Cutting ties: Desmond Tutu, one of the prominent global ambassador­s of Oxfam, says he is deeply disappoint­ed by sex abuse allegation­s against a former director.

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