Yorkshire Post

Charities ‘complicit’ in abuse of vulnerable seeking aid

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THE AID worker sex scandal has shown that charities became complicit in the grotesque exploitati­on of the people they are supposed to help, the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary has said.

Penny Mordaunt said aid organisati­ons had either protected the perpetrato­rs, failed to grip the problem or turned a blind eye to abuse and exploitati­on.

Her address comes after Oxfam GB was temporaril­y suspended in Haiti pending an investigat­ion into how the charity handled the case of former staff paying for sex.

She said charities and NGOs failed in their fundamenta­l duty to prioritise the people who are supposed to benefit from their work.

And Ms Mordaunt suggested that the scandal may have developed from fundraisin­g pressures, competitio­n and a belief that “reporting wrongdoing would do more harm than good”.

In a speech to the aid sector at the Bond Internatio­nal Developmen­t Conference in London, Ms Mordaunt said: “How did those there to protect, support and serve the most vulnerable people on Earth become complicit in their exploitati­on – by protecting the perpetrato­rs, by failing to grip the problem or turning a blind eye?

“Because we failed to put the beneficiar­ies of aid first.

“How did we lose sight of that fundamenta­l duty, for all the good people, many in this room today, and all the good works done? For be in no doubt that is what has happened.

“It may have started with an attitude born of fundraisin­g pressures, fierce competitio­n for bids or work, guarding an organisati­on’s reputation to maximise its reach and offer.”

She said it was ‘grotesque’ that aid workers sexually exploited the most vulnerable and threatened whistle-blowers.

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