Yorkshire Post

Oxfam abuse scandal ‘must be wake-up call’

- PAUL JEEVES NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

INTERNATIO­NAL DEVELOPMEN­T Secretary Penny Mordaunt has warned revelation­s around the handling of sex allegation­s at Oxfam should be a wakeup call to the charity sector as the fall-out from the scandal saw the first A-list celebrity sever ties with the under-fire organisati­on.

Penny Mordaunt claimed Oxfam had failed to show moral leadership and had not properly informed donors, regulators and prosecutor­s about the actions of its workers.

Hollywood star Minnie Driver has become the first celebrity to quit as an Oxfam ambassador following allegation­s that senior staff working in crisis zones paid for sex with vulnerable locals.

The charity also faces a challenge to hang on to major corporate partners, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award has confirmed it is reviewing its associatio­n with the organisati­on.

In a speech to an aid conference in Stockholm, Ms Mordaunt tore into Oxfam over its response to the revelation­s about aid workers in Haiti in 2011.

She said: “The recent revelation­s about Oxfam – not solely the actions perpetrate­d by a number of those staff – but the way the organisati­on responded to those events, should be a wake-up call to the sector. They let perpetrato­rs go. They did not inform donors, their regulator or prosecutin­g authoritie­s. It was not just the processes and procedures of that organisati­on that were lacking but moral leadership.”

Oxfam received £31.7m in taxpayer funding in 2016/17. But Ms Mordaunt indicated taxpayer funding could be cut off in the wake of the scandal.

She said: “No organisati­on is too big, or our work with them too complex, for me to hesitate to remove funding from them if we cannot trust them to put the beneficiar­ies of aid first.”

Oxfam officials were meeting the Charity Commission yesterday after the regulator launched a statutory inquiry. Ms Morduant, who said a culture change is needed, is due to meet the National Crime Agency today after talks with charity bosses, regulators and experts in recent days.

Driver quit her role after 20 years with the charity, and tweeted: “All I can tell you about this awful revelation about Oxfam is that I am devastated. Devastated for the women who were used by people sent there to help them, devastated by the response of an organisati­on that I have been raising awareness for since I was nine years old.”

The scandal led to the resignatio­n of Oxfam’s deputy chief executive Penny Lawrence, who said she took full responsibi­lity for what had happened on her watch. Oxfam has issued an “unreserved apology” to the Government, donors, supporters and the people of Haiti over its handling of incidents including the alleged use of prostitute­s by workers, in the earthquake-hit country.

Four members of Oxfam staff were dismissed and three, including the country director Roland van Hauwermeir­en, resigned before the end of the 2011 inquiry.

According to newspaper, Oxfam knew about concerns over the conduct of Mr van Hauwermeir­en and another man when they worked in Chad before they were given senior roles in Haiti.

 ??  ?? Hollywood actress Minnie Driver quit her role as an Oxfam ambassador after 20 years, following revelation­s aid workers abused their position to pay for sex with vulnerable people in crisis zones.
Hollywood actress Minnie Driver quit her role as an Oxfam ambassador after 20 years, following revelation­s aid workers abused their position to pay for sex with vulnerable people in crisis zones.

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