Sunday Times

Police launch probe into Bishops sex claims

Pick n Pay’s Ackerman defuses threats of litigation by old boys A Symphony of Splashing

- BOBBY JORDAN

ANTI-PREGNANCY MEASURES: Anna Celest Singh, Michaela Sewcharan and Nompendulo Dladla POLICE are investigat­ing complaints of sexual abuse at Bishops Diocesan College, Cape Town, one of South Africa’s top boys’ schools.

Western Cape police spokesman Novela Potelwa this week confirmed the investigat­ion by a unit that deals with child protection and sexual offences.

A senior investigat­or has held a meeting with the school’s headmaster, Guy Pearson, and spoken to the father of a schoolboy who reported a teacher for “inappropri­ate behaviour” in 2009.

It is understood that a prosecutio­n will ensue only if further complainan­ts come forward.

The pupil who reported abuse was not physically molested and did not make a formal complaint. However, the officer handling the investigat­ion said it was possible that there were former pupils too afraid or embarrasse­d to speak out.

The investigat­ion relates to allegation­s against teacher Leonard Kaplan, who resigned from the school in 2009 before having to face a disciplina­ry hearing related to accusation­s of “inappropri­ate and unprofessi­onal” behaviour with a pupil. It later emerged that similar allegation­s had been made against Kaplan 19 years earlier but he had been allowed to stay on at the school.

Although the school has declined to give details of the allegation­s against Kaplan, several former pupils have told the Sunday Times that he shared alcohol and pornograph­y with favoured pupils.

In one instance he allegedly developed an “inappropri­ate at-

Mutual respect and a wish for reconcilia­tion rather than recriminat­ion

tachment” to a pupil in his care.

Kaplan has refused to comment on the allegation­s and this week could not be contacted.

Former pupils and school administra­tors met on Thursday to discuss the allegation­s of misconduct at the school, although the Kaplan incident was not specifical­ly discussed. The meeting was characteri­sed by harsh words and belly laughs.

The meeting culminated in an appeal by Pick n Pay founder and Bishops old boy Raymond Ackerman for reconcilia­tion in the wake of a series of embarrassi­ng revelation­s, including a sex scandal from more than 30 years ago.

“Everybody felt that the key factor is that Bishops is a wonderful school,” Ackerman said. “All the legal issues are being dropped.”

Neverthele­ss, there were some heated exchanges at Thursday’s meeting and at one stage a speaker's microphone was switched off when he refused to stop reading from a prepared statement. He continued reading until he was heckled off the stage.

The current imbroglio began three years ago when a former boarding school pupil claimed he was repeatedly sexually abused by an older boy in 1983.

The pupil, now a businessma­n in the US, demanded an apology from his former housemaste­r, Tim Hamilton-Smith, and threatened the school with media exposure if his demand was not met.

The pupil claimed he was forced into oral sex with a senior pupil and punished by the school when he complained.

Attempts by school administra­tors to avoid damage to the school’s reputation backfired when internal correspond­ence regarding the matter was leaked to the media earlier this year.

The resultant publicity led to other allegation­s of abuse, spanning many years, being made.

Despite the police inquiry into the allegation­s of sexual abuse of pupils at the school, last week’s meeting focused on the treatment of Hamilton-Smith.

The well-known housemaste­r and rugby coach was advised to step down as secretary of the Old Diocesan Union because of the oral sex allegation­s involving a junior boy and a prefect. Hamilton-Smith said he had known nothing about the sexual nature of the abuse.

Many old boys believe that Hamilton-Smith was being made a scapegoat.

The Old Diocesan Union described Thursday’s meeting as a success.

“Mutual respect and a wish for reconcilia­tion rather than recriminat­ion showed just how good we as the products of this fine institutio­n can be when called upon to make critical decisions of a sensitive nature,” the union said.

Children play in a fountain on a hot summer’s day in Nice, southeaste­rn France, this week, as a heatwave continues to sizzle Europe CHEMOTHERA­PY in the treatment of cancers will be obsolete within 20 years, scientists have predicted, after announcing plans to map the genomes of 100 000 people to find the genes responsibl­e for cancers and rare diseases.

By the time children born today reach adulthood, the “sledgehamm­er” drugs used today, and their devastatin­g

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ??
Picture: REUTERS
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Picture: JACKIE CLAUSEN

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