The Irish Mail on Sunday

Crisis meeting at troubled Museum

- By Valerie Hanley and Michael O’Farrell

Second harassment complaint upheld

THE Culture Minister attended a board meeting of the embattled National Museum of Ireland this week – at which a key decision was made about the sex pest crisis engulfing the institutio­n.

A second sexual harassment complaint has been upheld against museum official Dr Andy Halpin, after he was accused of inappropri­ately touching a young intern working at the museum on her first – and only – day of work.

The shock revelation­s come after the Irish Mail on Sunday exposed how the museum has become a hotbed of misogyny riven with sexual harassment and assault allegation­s.

The MoS revealed last week how Mr Halpin, 57, admitted that a visit by schoolchil­dren to the museum had triggered his fantasies about tall women.

Mr Halpin, who is a director of an evangelica­l charity, also admitted that a female colleague had become ‘the foil’ for these fantasies and that he had viewed pictures of scantily clad women on his work computer.

Despite these admissions the married man, a member of the museum’s antiquitie­s division, denied sexually harassing archaeolog­ist Adrienne Corless. He has initiated a High Court case in order to be reinstated to his permanent and pensionabl­e State job.

Following our revelation­s the museum held a board meeting on Thursday, at which a key decision to try to move beyond the crisis was made.

Minister Heather Humphreys attended for half an hour of the three-hour session.

A museum source told the MoS: ‘There was a meeting between 10am and 1pm on Thursday and, somewhat unusually, it was held on the top floor of the Natural History Museum.’

A spokeswoma­n for Ms Humphreys accepted that legacy human resources issues were discussed at the board meeting. But she insisted the meeting was arranged weeks ago.

In a statement issued to the MoS, she said the minister had met with the board members before the meeting but that, in line with legislatio­n she did not participat­e in the meeting. The National Museum of Ireland declined to comment about the board meeting.

Meanwhile, it has emerged that the museum was advised to take disciplina­ry action against Mr Halpin after an investigat­ion into allegation­s he had sexually harassed a female intern almost 30 years his junior.

According to the intern Mr Halpin, during a book launch in November 2015, ‘continuall­y and deliberate­ly made physical contact’ with her by ‘touching her arms, back and waist area with his hands in a manner’ that she ‘believed was inappropri­ate’.

She claimed the incident left her ‘feeling violated and humiliated’ and as a result the student developed problems eating and sleeping.

As part of his job Mr Halpin worked with interns and volunteers on a daily basis.

A formal investigat­ion revealed Mr Halpin had regularly accessed inappropri­ate images on the internet in his shared office. After the investigat­ion, it was recommende­d that he be banned from having any physical contact with colleagues.

Sinn Féin’s Peadar Tóibín, chair of the Oireachtas Arts Committee, said a refusal by government to act had allowed ‘on-going bullying and harassment’ at the museum.

 ??  ?? EXPOSED: How the MoS revealed the crisis last week
EXPOSED: How the MoS revealed the crisis last week

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland