The Independent

The ridiculous, tragic closure of Kids Company

Ahead of his appearance before MPs, the BBC executive defends way the collapsed group was run. By

- IAN BURRELL

Alan Yentob says he is confident that financial supporters of the collapsed charity Kids Company will be successful in setting up a new organisati­on to take on some of its work with disadvanta­ged children.

MrYentob, the former chair of Kids Company, will appear before the Commons Public Administra­tion and Constituti­onal Affairs Committee on Thursday with the charity’s chief executive Camila Batmanghel­idjh.

Promising a robust defence of his actions, he said the way Kids Company had been treated was “disgracefu­l”. Speaking to The Independen­t, Mr Yentob said: “This needs to be told – the idea that [the charity] was not well-managed is really unfair.”

Mr Yentob, who presents the BBC arts show Imagine and is a high-profile executive, said he was in contact with several of the charity’s former philanthro­pist supporters, including the hedge-fund manager Stuart Roden and Nick Lawson, managing directorat Deutsche Bank. “They are setting up a charity to pick up some of the work that we did,” he said.

The Commons inquiry will examine the level of public funding given to Kids Company. Then Education Secretary Michael Gove blocked support by the Department for Education, but the Cabinet Office stepped in and Kids Company received a grant of £3m days before its collapse, despite advice from a senior civil servant that it was unlikely to represent value for money.

Mr Yentob is likely to be asked about the email correspond­ence he had with the Cabinet Office in which a risk assessment written by Kids Company warned of starvation, modern-day slavery and rioting as possible consequenc­es of the closure of the charity, which claimed to work with 36,000 vulnerable children. “Without a functionin­g space for hope, positivity and genuine care, these communitie­s will descend into savagery due to sheer desperatio­n for basic needs to be met,” the risk assessment said. Yentob said this was not intended in any way as a threat.

Ahead of the hearing, Mr Yentob said politician­s were not giving sufficient considerat­ion to the ongoing problem of social deprivatio­n among young people.

“There’s a denial about what’s going on in relation to child protection. It’s ridiculous, terrible and tragic that [the closure of Kids Company] has come about in this way.” He said civil servants had been warned “year after year” of the charity’s monetary pressures but that “all the allegation­s about financial mismanagem­ent” against the charity were not substantia­ted.

Mr Yentob suggested that Kids Company might have survived if it had not been for what he regards as spurious media allegation­s of sexual misconduct involving the charity’s clients. The revelation in July that an investigat­ion had been opened by the Metropolit­an Police’s Sexual Offences, Exploitati­on and Child Abuse Command was hugely damaging to Kids Company’s ability to receive funding from donors.

Mr Yentob said the matter concerned a young couple and he believes that the idea Kids Company’s management was “in any way complicit in sexual misconduct will be found to be completely untrue”.

Talking of his recent treatment by the press, Mr Yentob said that during the phonehacki­ng scandal his voicemails were intercepte­d “twice a day” over a seven-year period.

He has received £85,000 in compensati­on from Mirror Group Newspapers, publishers of the Daily Mirror.

MrYentob has also been the subject of front-page articles in The Sun in recent weeks, including one that focused on the alleged financial mismanagem­ent of The Space, a digital arts project.

A BBC One documentar­y on Kids Company’s collapse, provisiona­lly titled The Rise and Fall of “The Angel of Peckham”, will be shown early next year. The director Lynn Alleway had already been filming at the charity when it was engulfed by negative headlines and stopped operating.

It’s ridiculous, terrible and tragic that the closure of Kids Company has come about in this way

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 ?? RICHARD YOUNG/REX ?? Alan Yentob and Camila Batmanghel­idjh. The pair have faced a media backlash over Kids Company
RICHARD YOUNG/REX Alan Yentob and Camila Batmanghel­idjh. The pair have faced a media backlash over Kids Company

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