Gulf News

Oxfam unveils action plan after scandal

Comes after revelation­s staff used prostitute­s while working on aid operation

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Oxfam unveiled an action plan yesterday to tackle sexual misconduct following a prostituti­on scandal described as “a stain on Oxfam that will shame us for years” by the charity’s global chief.

The organisati­on said it would create a commission which will “operate at armslength from Oxfam” and be given access to the charity’s records and interview staff in a bid to stamp out abuse.

Oxfam will triple funding to more than $1 million (Dh3.67 million) to address safeguardi­ng processes, while also doubling the number of staff in this area and increasing investment in gender training.

The new plan comes a week after revelation­s that Oxfam staff used prostitute­s while working on the aid operation following Haiti’s devastatin­g 2010 earthquake.

‘Stain on Oxfam’

“What happened in Haiti and afterwards is a stain on Oxfam that will shame us for years, and rightly so,” said Winnie Byanyima, executive director of Oxfam Internatio­nal. “From the bottom of my heart I am asking for forgivenes­s,” she added.

The charity has denied a lack of transparen­cy over the Haiti affair, which has prompted a flight of supporters and led the British government to threaten cutting funds to organisati­ons which cover-up sex scandals.

Oxfam carried out its own internal investigat­ion in 2011 which led to four employees being fired and three others being allowed to resign, including country chief Roland van Hauwermeir­en.

The prostituti­on allegation­s were not passed to Haitian authoritie­s at the time of the probe, but Oxfam said yesterday it had now passed on the names of the men involved.

The charity admitted Thursday it rehired one of those sacked in Haiti just months later and is now checking whether any complaints were subsequent­ly made.

Gurpreet Singh worked as a consultant in Ethiopia from October to December 2011, a decision Oxfam said was “a serious error and should never have happened”.

The 2011 Haiti investigat­ion will be published by the charity with names of witnesses redacted, while the new commission’s record of historical cases of sexual misconduct will also be made public.

Oxfam has come under fire for failing to inform other aid organisati­ons of the allegation­s against its staff including van Hauwermeir­en, whose behaviour working for Oxfam in Chad had already led to complaints. He went on to work for French charity Action Against Hunger in Bangladesh.

“We need to make sure anyone guilty of such gross misconduct is not able to move between different organisati­ons, exposing more vulnerable people to risk,” said Byanyima.

 ?? Reuters ??
Reuters

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