Malta Independent

Murdered MP’s widower Brendan Cox quits charities

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The husband of murdered MP Jo Cox, Brendan Cox, has quit two charities he set up in her memory after allegation­s of sexual assault were made public. Mr Cox denied assaulting a woman in her 30s at Harvard University in 2015 - but admitted to “inappropri­ate” behaviour while working for Save the Children. He has left posts at More in Common and the Jo Cox Foundation a week after the Mail on Sunday published the claims. Mr Cox apologised for the “hurt and offence” caused by his past behaviour. In a statement issued on Saturday, he said: “While I do not accept the allegation­s contained in the 2015 complaint to the police in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, I do acknowledg­e and understand that during my time at Save the Children I made mistakes.” Mr Cox, who married Jo Cox in 2009, was reported to police in Massachuse­tts in the US in 2015 for “inappropri­ate touching” while on a trip to Harvard - a claim which he denies. The father-of-two said some of the allegation­s against him were a “massive exaggerati­on”, but conceded that he had at times “oversteppe­d the line”. In 2015 the Mail on Sunday reported that Brendan Cox had stepped down from his position as chief strategist at Save The Children over allegation­s of “inappropri­ate behaviour” which he at the time denied. More details of Mr Cox’s alleged behaviour emerged after Oxfam issued its own apology over a sex scandal involving aid workers in Haiti. Labour MP Mrs Cox was fatally shot and stabbed outside her constituen­cy office in West Yorkshire by a far-right extremist during the EU Referendum campaign in 2016. Mr Cox said it had become “much more difficult” to focus on the two charities he set up after his wife’s death, the community group More in Common and the Jo Cox Foundation. “For that reason, while away over half term, I decided to step down from my current public roles for the time being,” he said. He added: “In the past I have focused on disputing what I felt was untrue in the allegation­s, but I realise now that it’s more important to take full responsibi­lity for what I have done.” A spokespers­on for the Jo Cox Foundation said the charity “admired” Mr Cox’s contributi­on as a trustee. “The trustees and staff have admired the integrity, commitment and dedication that Brendan has shown in our work to create a positive legacy for Jo,” they said.

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