Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Bill Cosby: young people should focus on my work to improve education

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Bill Cosby has said young people should separate what he has to say about their future from sexual assault allegation­s lodged against him.

The actor and comedian was in Alabama to speak to high school students as part of a nonprofit foundation’s campaign to improve education in the south-central part of the state. In a taped interview with ABC’s Good Morning America, Cosby was asked how he would respond if a youngster pressed him about accusation­s that he drugged and sexually assaulted a number of women over a period of decades.

“I think many of them say, ‘Well, you’re a hypocrite. You say one thing, you say the other,’” he replied. “My point is, ‘OK, listen to me carefully. I’m telling you where the road is out. You want to go here or you want to be concerned about who is giving you the message?’”

Cosby, 77, who has never been criminally charged, did not address assault claims made by more than 25 women and has largely maintained his silence since the allegation­s resurfaced starting last year. He faces two pending suits.

“I have been in this business 52 years … I’ve never seen anything like this. And reality is the situation,” he said, adding: “and I can’t speak.”

He volunteere­d his time to bring exposure to area schools, the Black Belt Community Foundation president, Felecia Lucky, has said. He was to meet students at Selma high school on Friday before marching with them across the historic Edmund Pettus bridge. The bridge was the setting for Bloody Sunday in 1965, where police beat peaceful demonstrat­ors marching in favor of voting rights.

“I really know about what I’m going to do tomorrow. I have a ton of ideas to put on television about people and their love for each other,” he said.

Shortly after the scandal broke last year, NBC decided not to move forward with a planned Cosby sitcom. The star of the influentia­l and popular 1980s family comedy The Cosby Show, he has long weighed in on the issues of education and personal responsibi­lity in the African American community.

He and his wife, Camille, have donated millions of dollars in gifts to colleges and hundreds of thousands more for scholarshi­p grants through the couple’s foundation.

ABC said more of the interview was to air Friday on Nightline.

 ??  ?? Prof.Deepal Weerasekar­a Prof.of Gynecologi­st Medical Director, NFTH addressing the closing ceremony
Prof.Deepal Weerasekar­a Prof.of Gynecologi­st Medical Director, NFTH addressing the closing ceremony
 ??  ?? Dr.Suranga Hettipathi­rana Consultant gynecologi­st, NFTH Lighting the oil lamp
Dr.Suranga Hettipathi­rana Consultant gynecologi­st, NFTH Lighting the oil lamp

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