Daily Mail

Shame of charities facing hundreds of abuse claims a year

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

BRITAIN’S charities are facing soaring numbers of complaints of abuse and mistreatme­nt.

A total of 5,730 ‘serious incidents’ – the majority concerning the safeguardi­ng of vulnerable people, including sex cases – were reported to the Charity Commission in 2019/20.

This is the equivalent of 15 incidents every day, and represents a 47 per cent increase on the year before, according to the watchdog’s annual report. In 2018/19 there were 3,895 serious incidents.

Safeguardi­ng incidents are those which have ‘resulted in or risk significan­t harm to beneficiar­ies and other people who come into contact with the charity through its work’.

They can include serious sexual abuse, exploitati­on and harassment complaints, as well as cases of neglect, bullying or racial discrimina­tion.

Britain’s foreign aid charities have been mired in a sex abuse crisis since it emerged that Oxfam workers had used prostitute­s during a humanitari­an crisis in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake there.

Earlier this week, the Daily Mail revealed that aid charities made 452 incident reports relating to safeguardi­ng, of which three in five related to sex cases.

But today’s revelation­s suggest the problem is much more widespread among charities than previously thought – and is also a serious problem outside the aid sector. In 2019/20 there were 3,411 safeguardi­ng incidents reported across the sector – nearly 60 per cent of the total.

The most common type of harm reported is ‘abuse and mistreatme­nt’, the watchdog said. This includes sex cases but the report did not reveal the proportion. Other serious incidents included 897 reports of fraud and 43 claims that charity staff were linked to terrorism or extremism.

The commission’s annual report for 2019/20 said the ‘abuse and mistreatme­nt of people’ remained the most prominent threats in the charity sector.

It also revealed that the number of whistleblo­wers breaking cover to speak out about practices at their charities soared by a third to 247.

The commission has used its regulatory powers against charities 1,962 times – up 5 per cent in a year. It has concluded 181 statutory inquiries into charities – up 17 per cent on the year before.

Britain’s aid sector has been mired in controvers­y for two years, with major organisati­ons such as Oxfam and Save the Children admitting huge failings. This week the Mail revealed that significan­t numbers of staff at the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t had also been implicated for the first time. In 2019/20 there were 26 safeguardi­ng cases reported.

The Charity Commission would not reveal which charities had sent in the most incident reports, but recently the watchdog has investigat­ed serious failings at the Royal National Institute for the Blind, where children were found to be ‘at risk of harm’.

The regulator handed the charity an official warning following serious concerns about services provided at its Pears Centre children’s home in Coventry. The issues included medication errors, use of physical restraint and failure to answer questions on an unexplaine­d injury to a child.

It has also launched an investigat­ion into a charity-run cinema in Newcastle upon Tyne, which has been hit by allegation­s of sexual abuse and harassment.

Charities have to report all their ‘serious incidents’ to the Charity Commission.

Helen Stephenson, the watchdog’s chief executive, said: ‘Over the past few years, we have seen grave governance failings in some household name charities. As recent inquiries have shown, if charities fail in their responsibi­lity to keep people safe, we will not hesitate to take action.’

 ??  ?? From Thursday’s Mail
From Thursday’s Mail

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