Thousands cancel Oxfam donations
the chain’s nearly 900 stores are still closed, while many of those that are open are offering limited menus or have reduced hours.
The closures were the result of delayed chicken deliveries by DHL. A 26-YEAR-OLD woman has been fined £120 after admitting telling paramedics to “move your van” and leaving a foul-mouthed note on their ambulance.
Kirsty Sharman pleaded guilty to a public order offence over the incident in which the crew had been responding to a 999 call from her next-door neighbour in Stoke-on-Trent.
Sharman, of Parsonage Street, offered her “most sincere apologies to the ambulance staff”. OXFAM has received 26 allegations of misconduct since the Haiti sex scandal erupted two weeks ago, charity chiefs have revealed.
Mark Goldring, Oxfam GB’s chief executive, said 16 of the claims stemmed from abroad, while 10 came from the UK.
Giving evidence to the Commons International Development Committee, Mr Goldring said around 7,000 people have cancelled regular donations to Oxfam over the past 10 days, adding that corporate sponsors appeared to be “reserving judgment”.
Mr Goldring publicly apologised for the actions of charity staff who sexually exploited female victims of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
He also apologised for his own comments which appeared to play down the seriousness of the scandal, when he told a newspaper that the charity was being attacked as if it had “murdered babies in their cots”.
The parliamentary hearing comes in the wake of the news of resignations and dismissals of Oxfam staff in Haiti following allegations of “sex parties” involving prostitutes. Asked how many more revelations had come to his notice since newspaper reports of the Haiti scandal emerged earlier this month, Mr Goldring said: “Across Oxfam Great Britain we have had about 26 stories, reports come to us which were either new reports come out as a result of the stories, or earlier stories where people said, ‘I didn’t necessarily report this at the time.’ Over an extended period of time, I am not talking about recent cases.
“We really want people to come forward wherever they are and whenever this happened. Some of those cases relate to the UK, some of them relate to our international programme.”
Mr Goldring apologised after committee chairman Stephen Twigg said that the parallel the charity chief drew with the murder of babies in an interview with the Guardian was regarded by many people as “grossly inappropriate”.
Mr Goldring responded: “I do apologise. I was under stress, I’d given many interviews, I’d made many decisions to try to lead Oxfam’s response to this. I should not have said those things.”
Oxfam International’s executive director Winnie Byanyima told the committee: “Some hideous men came into our organisation and abused the trust of the British people, the supporters.
“But they were able to get away, to get a recommendation to leave. This was wrong.”
Mr Goldring told the committee Oxfam made the wrong call at the time of the original investigation into events in Haiti when it issued a press release revealing its findings of “serious misconduct” involving bullying, intimidation and breaches of the charity’s code of conduct, but did not go into details about the fact that sexual exploitation was involved.
“At the time, people thought that was being transparent. We know now that that was not enough. We should have been completely transparent.”