Daily Nation Newspaper

WHEN DO-GOODERS DO HARM

…Liberia rape scandal shifts aid sector spotlight

- THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION.

DAKAR - A rape scandal at a U.S. charity in Liberia has exposed the dangers of small, unregulate­d organisati­ons escaping scrutiny over sexual abuse in the aid world, humanitari­an experts said.

One of the founders of the More Than Me (MTM) charity, Macintosh Johnson, was accused of raping multiple girls in the group’s care over several years, according to an investigat­ion by U.S. news website Pro-Publica published earlier this month.

Johnson was arrested in 2014 and died of AIDS two years later while awaiting re-trial for alleged rape.

Co-founded by an American woman, Katie Meyler, MTM gained popularity on social media and received millions of dollars in funding even though its managers had little experience in internatio­nal aid or child protection, according to Pro-Publica.

The Liberian government last month launched an investigat­ion into MTM, which runs 19 schools in Liberia. MTM said last week in a statement that it would cooperate fully with the probe.

From Oxfam workers using prostitute­s in Haiti to Save the Children staff reporting misconduct by bosses, the global aid sector has been rocked by revelation­s of sex abuse this year.

But while big-name agencies are in the spotlight, industry experts fear that smaller ones could slip through the cracks.

Small charities like MTM sometimes lack the mechanisms and oversight needed to spot sex predators and effectivel­y respond, said Dorothea Hilhorst, a professor of humanitari­an aid at the Internatio­nal Institute of Social Studies in the Netherland­s.

“There is abuse everywhere ... but with the bigger agencies you see more standards, learning, reporting, action, more eyes on the ball,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Small charities can also have advantages over big ones, often connecting better with people on the ground, but they need certain safeguards in place, such as an oversight board and staff training in core humanitari­an standards, Hilhorst added.

“I think small, unregulate­d, highly celebritis­ed charities ... probably have more capacity to do harm,” said Alexia Pepper de Caires, co-founder of Safe Space, a Britain-based group fighting sexual harassment in the aid world.

CHANGING THE SYSTEM

The Pro-Publica report sparked outrage among Liberians, with groups this month protesting against MTM.

“The rape of girls could have been prevented if More Than Me and the government of Liberia, in its oversight role, took security and safety seriously,” said Facia Harris, a member of the Liberia Feminist Forum, which staged a protest this week.

Liberia’s minister of gender, children and social protection declined to comment with the government investigat­ion ongoing. Several experts said that while host countries should regulate charities, responsibi­lity also lies with donors.

More Than Me received more than $600, 000 in financing from the U.S. government, according to Pro-Publica. “I cannot stress enough how much we believe this violates what we stand for,” said Mark Green, administra­tor of the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID).

USAID since last year has held sessions with its partners around the world on the prevention of sex abuse and exploitati­on and is changing its contracts to require that they adopt policies to the highest standards, the U.S. aid chief added. “This is not a one-off. We are going to stay on top of it every single day,” Green told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

But for some, policies and procedures are not enough.

Andrew MacLeod, a lawyer who co-founded the charity Hear Their Cries to fight sex abuse in the aid sector, said failure to prevent or report such exploitati­on should be criminalis­ed.

“When a child sex offence takes place, an organisati­on should have to establish that it took all reasonable steps in prevention, training, detection and prosecutio­n,” he said.

“This problem is not going to be fixed unless senior people start going to jail.”

“PERSONAL SAVIOUR”

MTM declined to speak to the Thomson Reuters Foundation but pointed to a statement on their website. It said that as soon as they learned of the abuse, the charity reported it to Liberian authoritie­s and took action to prevent it from happening again.

“We are deeply sorry... and regret that we were unprepared for the magnitude of the challenges we would face when we opened More Than Me Academy in 2013,” the charity said on its website.

“We were ambitious but also naive.” One risk factor for MTM was that it was largely driven by a sole individual, Meyler, said Pepper de Caires of Safe Space. Meyler, who has 83, 000 followers on Instagram where she often posts photos of children, was celebrated as an ‘Ebola Fighter’ in Time Magazine’s 2014 Person of the Year award and has won praise from the likes of Bill Gates and Oprah Winfrey.

She has taken a leave of absence from the charity, according to a letter posted on MTM’s website.

“I think it’s all about staying away from the personal saviour,” Pepper de Caires added. –

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia