The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Haiti suspends Oxfam operations pending sex scandal probe

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PORT-AU-PRINCE: Haiti on Thursday suspended the operations of British charity Oxfam pending the outcome of its investigat­ion into allegation­s that its staff sexually exploited Haitians after a devastatin­g 2010 earthquake.

The country’s ministry of planning and foreign aid said Oxfam GB had made a ‘serious error’ by failing to inform Haitian authoritie­s of the actions by their staff at the time they occurred.

“These reprehensi­ble acts, alleged crimes, acknowledg­ed by the perpetrato­rs as well as the NGO, are a serious violation of the dignity of the Haitian people,” a government statement said.

It said the charity was suspended for two months pending an internal Haitian investigat­ion into the matter.

Aviol Fleurant, the minister for planning and foreign aid, said that if Haiti’s own investigat­ions found “a link between the crimes committed and the money that Oxfam received to help the Haitian people I will see to it that the foreign ministry declares, in the name of the government, OxfamGB persona non-grata and will have to leave the country.”

“Haiti is no longer an NGO republic,” he said after meeting with Oxfam’s director for Latin America and the Caribbean, Simon Ticehurst. “We are not joking: the dignity of the Haitian people has no price.”

An investigat­ion conducted by Oxfam a year after the earthquake had found that seven staff were accused of using prostitute­s at an Oxfam-funded residence.

The 2011 report, disclosed on Monday, also found that three staff members had physically threatened a witness.

One official has acknowledg­ed paying for prostitute­s and the others were accused of harassment and intimidati­on.

A young Haitian woman told The Times newspaper she had had relations with the former Oxfam country director in Haiti, Roland Van Hauwermeir­en, when she was 16 and he was 61.

Van Hauwermeir­en denied to Belgian media last week, however, that he had organised orgies with young prostitute­s in Haiti, and said he had ‘intimate relations’ with ‘an honourable, mature woman’ whom he did not pay.

Four staff were fired for gross misconduct and three others, including Van Hauwermeir­en, were allowed to quit.

Oxfam formally apologised to the Haitian government on Monday for its handling of the scandal and for failing to report it promptly to local authoritie­s.

“It was not for Oxfam to decide whether a crime had been committed ... that was the wrong decision,” Oxfam GB’s chief executive Mark Goldring said Tuesday at a hearing before a British parliament­ary committee.

Fleurant, the planning minister, said he had not ruled out demanding the extraditio­n of Van Hauwermeir­en and others to face charges in Haiti. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows Ticehurst (tight) and Oxfam Intermon Executive Affiliate Unit head, Margalida Massot leave the offices of the Minister of Planning and External Cooperatio­n in Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo
File photo shows Ticehurst (tight) and Oxfam Intermon Executive Affiliate Unit head, Margalida Massot leave the offices of the Minister of Planning and External Cooperatio­n in Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo

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