The Scotsman

Scandal made worse by culture of secrecy

Victim’s courage is in stark contrast to council’s handling of children’s home abuse,

- says John Mclellan John Mclellan is a Conservati­ve councillor in Edinburgh

Not for nothing is the anonymity of witnesses in sex crime cases rigidly observed by news organisati­ons.

The ordeal of giving evidence to police and then facing cross-examinatio­n from defence lawyers is harrowing enough without then being judged in the court of public opinion. It was for that reason that blogger Craig Murray was jailed last year for repeatedly flouting the terms of a court order not to identify witnesses in the Alex Salmond trial in which the former First Minister was acquitted.

In her judgement, trial judge Lady Dorrian said that although he did not positively identify the complainan­ts, he understood and deliberate­ly ran the risk he was taking and “relished” publishing enough informatio­n to allow their identities to be pieced together. He got eight months.

For a victim to voluntaril­y waive their anonymity takes enormous courage and belief that their experience needs to be exposed, almost always because there is a wider issue of the welfare of others at stake. Into that category falls Holly Hamilton who as a teenager was sexually abused for six months by care worker Gordon Collins in an Edinburgh Council secure unit, and who this week told the Edinburgh Evening News and the BBC, what she had been through.

The assaults on Miss Hamilton took place 15 years ago, but Collins was only tried in 2016 after a cold case review produced evidence of repeated abuse of four underage girls and he was jailed for six years.

The council then conducted its own serious case review in 2017 which found the victims’ complaints had been dismissed because staff thought they were troublemak­ers or attention-seekers, and also revealed concerns about inappropri­ate restraint, isolation and other harsh treatment of the young people in the units.

It’s no surprise, therefore, that as a key witness in the investigat­ion, Miss Hamilton was shocked to learn five years on that another council inquiry had uncovered virtually the same issues in the units and that "illegality, injustice and maladminis­tration" went on long after Collins was jailed until another whistle-blower sounded the alarm in 2020.

The Evening News revealed the 2017 council review found young people were “at risk from punitive and sometimes painful measures of control by staff members. Many were also subject to isolation and removal of personal possession­s, often unnecessar­ily and often for unnecessar­ily long periods."

It’s virtually identical to the findings of the latest report which makes over 40 recommenda­tions for improvemen­ts and illustrate­s the extent to which the reforms identified in 2017 were not followed through.

“It just seems to be recommenda­tion after recommenda­tion. Every ten years the same recommenda­tions but nothing ever changes,” said Miss Hamilton with every justificat­ion. “How many generation­s of broken children does this system need to create?" she asked.

For Miss Hamilton at least, getting these horrendous conditions out in the open matters, and that is in stark contrast to the actions of Edinburgh Council, which only made the latest report available to councillor­s under strict conditions of secrecy, to the extent that note-taking was prohibited, and only the very briefest outline was published in the agenda papers for the last full council meeting on March 17. At that meeting the Snplabour administra­tion, with the assistance of two Green councillor­s, voted against having any kind of debate of the issue because it was 5pm.

So a woman has the guts to speak out about the abuse she suffered at the hands of a council worker and how that kind of abuse has continued but, rather than have an open debate, Edinburgh Council’s leader Adam Mcvey told the Evening News that, as it was 5pm, there had to be a duty of care to staff and extending the meeting might impact on their welfare. If only the victims in St Katherine’s House had experience­d the same level of concern for their welfare.

Yesterday, the council’s new director of education and children’s services, Amanda Hatton, wrote in the Evening News that her department is “working hard to put in place some immediate steps”. In other words, the department has still to implement safeguards which should have been in place at least five years ago, yet her predecesso­r was able to walk away18 months ago with full notice payments and glowing tributes. Rather than reassuring, her article is an admission of abject failure.

Donna Ockenden’s inquiry into the heart-breaking tragedy at Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust found “it failed to investigat­e, failed to learn and failed to improve”, and while Edinburgh Council eventually did investigat­e what was happening in its secure units, the evidence shows it failed to learn or improve, and all the investigat­ions and recommenda­tions in the world will make no difference if they do not result in meaningful change.

Not only that, but the newly updated Scottish Standards Commission’s code of conduct requires councillor­s to “maintain and strengthen the public's trust and confidence in the integrity of the council”, which prioritise­s an authority’s reputation above all other considerat­ions, and is the basis of a cover-up culture, not one of openness.

Analysis of Shrewsbury in The Times cited “dreadful care, a reluctance to investigat­e and a defensive closing of ranks against families, all overseen by bosses who did not want to know”.

That too could apply to Edinburgh Council, which set such narrow parameters for last year’s review of management culture by Susanne Tanner QC that it failed to re-examine past cases, and as a result the whistle-blowers it should have satisfied instead believe it was a whitewash and want a public inquiry. After Holly Hamilton’s testimony this week, who can blame them?

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 ?? ?? Edinburgh Council leader Adam Mcvey
Edinburgh Council leader Adam Mcvey

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