The Scotsman

Judge ‘misled’ by staff over baby ashes

Council forced to publish report Parents still left with questions

- By CHRIS GREEN

Staff at a Scottish crematoriu­m where the bodies of babies were burned alongside unrelated adults misled a senior judge investigat­ing its “abhorrent” procedures, according to an internal report.

The claim is contained in a heavily redacted version of a report into the baby ashes scandal at Hazlehead Crematoriu­m in Aberdeen, which the city’s council has previously refused to publish.

It says that former senior judge Lord Bonomy, whose Infant Cremation Commission made 64 recommenda­tions when it reported in 2014, was misled by staff when he visited Hazlehead.

A separate investigat­ion by Dame Elish Angiolini, which issued its findings two years later, revealed that “unethical and abhorrent practices” had gone on at the crematoriu­m for “many years”. The ashes of babies and unrelated adults were often mixed together and given back to the adult’s relatives, while the parents of infants were told that none had been recovered, it said. At the time, lawyers representi­ng the families involved in the inquiry said the malpractic­e detailed in Dame Elish’s report would fill people with “revulsion”.

Concern about practices at Hazlehead followed similar revelation­s about Mortonhall crematoriu­m in Edinburgh, which had been burying baby ashes in secret for decades,as revealed by the Edinburgh Evening News five years ago.

Aberdeen City Council was ordered to release the previously secret 76-page report by the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er after a formal request from BBC.

Carried out by independen­t investigat­or Richard Penn, it said it was “clear that Lord Bonomy had been misled by those Aberdeen City Council staff who met with him and his team during the Infant Cremation Commission’s visit to Aberdeen Crematoriu­m”.

Much of the report was

redacted, which the council said was mainly to protect the personal data of some employees. Paul Wells, who lost his son Scott to cot death and did not receive any ashes, said: “It’s devastatin­g to keep going through it all. There is still so much blacked out, it still leaves so many questions unanswered. I don’t think we’ll ever really get closure.”

Ross Thomson, Conservati­ve Mpforaberd­eensouth,saidthe report’s allegation­s were “very concerning” and questioned why the crematoriu­m’s apparently misleading behaviour had not been challenged internally.

“It’s devastatin­g to keep going through it all. There is still so much blacked out, it still leaves so many questions unanswered”

newdeskts@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? The design for the statue that will be placed in Princes Street Gardens in memory of victims of the Mortonhall baby ashes scandal
The design for the statue that will be placed in Princes Street Gardens in memory of victims of the Mortonhall baby ashes scandal

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