Glasgow Times

Sturgeon will ‘vigorously’ refute Salmond allegation­s, she says

-

NICOLA Sturgeon has said she will “vigorously” refute accusation­s she misled the Scottish Parliament, following claims by Alex Salmond.

The First Minister said she would give an account of her involvemen­t to a Holyrood committee investigat­ing the Scottish Government’s handling of harassment complaints against Mr Salmond.

Ms Sturgeon has been accused by her predecesso­r of misleading parliament with her accounts of when she first knew about sexual harassment allegation­s against him.

Asked about Mr Salmond’s claims, she said: “I don’t accept that and I will refute that vigorously.”

Ms Sturgeon said she had hoped to appear before the Holyrood committee investigat­ing the affair this coming week, but her appearance had been delayed by a “couple of weeks”.

She said: “I will sit before that committee and I will set out my account of what happened, given the very difficult situation that I faced, and people can make their own judgments on that.”

Asked if Mr Salmond was “spinning false conspiracy theories”, the First Minister said: “What I certainly reflect on is that at times I appear to be simultaneo­usly accused of colluding with Mr Salmond to somehow cover up accusation­s of sexual harassment on the one hand, and then on the other hand, being part of some dastardly conspiracy to bring him down. “Neither of those are true.

“I, at the time I became aware of all of this, just tried hard not to interfere with what was going on and not to do anything that would see these swept aside rather than properly investigat­ed.”

Ms Sturgeon said the Scottish Government had made “mistakes” in its handling of the complaints, which would be the subject of the Holyrood committee’s inquiry.

She initially told Holyrood she first heard of the sexual misconduct complaints against her predecesso­r when they met at her home on April 2, 2018, but it later emerged she discussed the allegation­s with Mr Salmond’s chief of staff, Geoff Aberdein, in her Holyrood office four days earlier.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom