Cape Argus

Unicef defends Beckham after leaked e-mail allegation­s

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DAVID Beckham’s representa­tives say hacked e-mails discussing his charity work and prospectiv­e honours paint a “deliberate­ly inaccurate picture” of his views.

The messages, released by a group calling itself Football Leaks and published by French website Mediapart, appear to show the star footballer was using humanitari­an work in attempts to gain a knighthood.

A spokespers­on for Beckham said: “This story is based on outdated material taken out of context from hacked and doctored private e-mails from a third-party server and gives a deliberate­ly inaccurate picture. David Beckham and Unicef have had a powerful partnershi­p in support of children for over 15 years… David and Unicef are rightly proud of what they have and will continue to achieve together and are happy to let the facts speak for themselves.”

Representa­tives said the David Beckham 7 Fund had raised millions of pounds for vulnerable children, adding that Beckham had “given significan­t time and energy” and personal financial donations to the initiative, following previous charity work including donating his earnings from Paris Saint-Germain.

But his philanthro­pic image has been shaken by allegation­s the former Manchester United superstar dismissed lower-ranking awards, saying: “Unless it’s a knighthood, f *** off ”.

Unicef, the UN Children’s Fund, said it was “extremely proud” of its work with Beckham, praising his efforts in raising awareness and funds for its causes and personally donating “significan­t” sums.

Beckham was made a Unicef Goodwill Ambassador in 2005 and has appeared in several high-profile campaigns for the charity, visiting Swaziland in June last year during a devastatin­g drought. His fund has undertaken projects in Burkina Faso, Swaziland, Papua New Guinea and Cambodia to tackle issues including poor water and sanitation, malnutriti­on and HIV infection in mothers and children.

Unicef said: “As well as generously giving his time, energy and support to help raise awareness and funds for Unicef ’s work for children, David has given significan­t funds personally. We are extremely proud of the 7 Fund and all it has achieved for children. Since it launched in February 2015 it has raised millions of pounds for Unicef programmes and reached millions of people around the world.”

Several British and European news outlets reported they had seen e-mails sent by the star concerning his charity work. They claimed he had initially refused to use his own money to fund the charity and demanded Unicef pay to fly him business class, despite his sponsors funding a private jet. The multimilli­onaire was apparently furious when officials failed to secure a knighthood for him and admitted in e-mails that his charitable efforts were part of a campaign to become Sir David.

Unicef said it worked closely with high profile personalit­ies “in good faith” to raise money and improve the lives of children in danger around the world.

Its ambassador­s, who include Serena Williams, Orlando Bloom and Cate Blanchett, “support Unicef in a voluntary capacity”.

 ??  ?? AMBASSADOR: David Beckham attends the Unicef 70th anniversar­y celebratio­n at UN headquarte­rs in New York in December.
AMBASSADOR: David Beckham attends the Unicef 70th anniversar­y celebratio­n at UN headquarte­rs in New York in December.

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