The Scotsman

Boarding school pupils’ ‘silence’ over abuse claim

●Author says child abuse inquiry may not uncover all facts at private schools

- By SHÂN ROSS

Former pupils of independen­t private schools will find it extremely difficult to come forward and give evidence to the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry (SCAI) because of the “mafia omerta” of the Scottish establishm­ent, it has been claimed.

Edinburgh-based journalist and author Alex Renton, who submitted evidence to the inquiry including informatio­n given to him by former pupils of Fettes College in Edinburgh and Gordonstou­n, said abused pupils, particular­ly at boarding schools, still felt bound by a code of “don’t snitch, don’t tell, don’t talk outside the class”.

Freedom of Informatio­n figures from Police Scotland obtained by The Scotsman reveal 116 recorded sexual crimes were reported within 29 leading boarding schools in Scotland between 2012 and 2017.

A total of 98 people were charged with sexual assault at these establishm­ents during the same period.

SCAI, which started in October 2015, is examining alleged abuse at establishm­ents run by religious orders. A future phase will include private boarding schools.

Those under investigat­ion are Fettes College, where former prime minister Tony Blair was educated, and Gordonstou­n – Prince Charles’s old school. The former Keil School, Loretto School, Merchiston Castle School and Morrison’s Academy – when it was a boarding school – are also being investigat­ed. Other schools

may be added. Mr Renton, who alleges he was abused at Ashdown House Prep School in Sussex – the school attended by Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and actor Damian Lewis – said many abused former boarding school pupils in Scotland contacted him after his ITV documentar­y, Boarding Schools: The Secret Shame, was broadcast earlier this year.

“There’s a perfect storm of factors preventing these people reporting abuse,” he said.

“There’s the shame, fear of not being believed, guilt, and add to that a system whose cultural life blood is ‘we’re separate, we’re different, we’re better than everyone else’. As a society, we’re toxified by that.

“The Scottish establishm­ent is very largely drawn from schools like those. It is not like the masonry in the police force, but is still clearly running Edinburgh and Britain.

“It is run by cabals and networks which don’t need to be formally constitute­d and include social connection­s back to childhood. Many of these former pupils are in these profession­s and perhaps their children too, meaning they can be wary of getting involved in the inquiry.”

Mr Renton, author of Stiff Upper Lip – Secrets, Crimes and the Schooling of a Ruling Class, added: “Edinburgh is unique in that it has such a high proportion of privately educated people. This has a huge social effect on the city.”

Fettes College has removed the portrait of one its former headmaster­s, Anthony Chenevix-trench, ahead of the inquiry following allegation­s he would beat pupils for his own sexual gratificat­ion. A Fettes College spokeswoma­n said: “Fettes College has fully co-operated with the SCAI, submitting rigorously researched documentat­ion in July 2017 as requested.

“We believe responses to boarding schools’ submission­s will not be made this calendar year, so it would be contrary to the aims of the SCAI for us to make any comment on allegation­s until that time. We continue to urge any past pupils who wish to report historical abuse to contact the Scai/police Scotland in the first instance.”

Last month Andrew Keir – a retired physics teacher who taught at Gordonstou­n from 1983-94 – was found guilty of grooming three boys. Following the trial, the school apologised for not taking the boys’ concerns seriously at the time. A spokeswoma­n for Gordonstou­n School in Elgin, Moray, which contacted more than 3,000 former pupils asking them to report historical allegation­s after claims were made by former pupils, said: “It is distressin­g to think any former student may have been harmed here.

“In recent years we have written repeatedly to former students expressing our concern for any student affected, urging them to contact the school or the police, directing them to the SCAI or the National Confidenti­al Forum and offering to help them in any way we can.

“Today, Gordonstou­n has a rigorous approach to child protection. Our policies and procedures are robust, developed and approved by leading child protection experts.”

John Edward, director of the Scottish Council of Independen­t Schools, said: “Every school contacted by the SCAI is supporting it fully, co-operating with every request and following the word and spirit of the inquiry.

“Any former pupils with concerns or issues should raise them with the inquiry.”

 ?? PICTURE: CAROLINE IRBY ?? 0 Alex Renton said an ‘omerta’ culture among the Scottish ‘establishm­ent’ meant that abuse at private schools was kept hidden
PICTURE: CAROLINE IRBY 0 Alex Renton said an ‘omerta’ culture among the Scottish ‘establishm­ent’ meant that abuse at private schools was kept hidden

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