Oxfam - The New Ratners!


Morten Morland really hits the nail on the head with his cartoon in The Times about the scandalous cover up at Oxfam where the vile behaviour of senior officials was swept under the carpet to protects the organisation's 'reputation'.

Well that strategy has backfired spectacularly since Oxfam is to the charity sector what Ratners the jewellers became to the jewellery industry - an ugly embarrassment that deserves to be shunned.

Surely a similar fate now awaits Oxfam although if you watch the following YouTube video of Gerald Ratner's infamous "It's total crap" speech to the Institute of Directors in 1991 - he at least shows some insight into the unacceptable nature of his own behaviour.

Whereas the bosses at Oxfam are still trying to defend their handling of the Haiti scandal.



  


What a Shocker! (10/02/18)


Here's a dreadful story from The Times exposing a major scandal and cover-up at one of the world's best known charities, Oxfam.

The Twitter post by journalist Ian Birrell about the 'poverty industry' seems prescient after reading The Times revelations, but the cover-up is almost worse than the outrageous behaviour of Oxfam's male executives in Haiti. 

  

Top Oxfam staff paid Haiti quake survivors for sex

Charity covered up scandal in earthquake zone • Girls at ‘Caligula orgy’ may have been under-age


Sean O’Neill - The Times
Roland van Hauwermeiren, Oxfam country director for Haiti, admitted using prostitutes after the disaster in Port-au-Prince

One of Britain’s biggest charities covered up the use of prostitutes by senior aid workers in earthquake-torn Haiti.

A Times investigation has found that Oxfam, which receives £300 million a year in British government funds and public donations, allowed three men to resign and sacked four for gross misconduct after an inquiry into sexual exploitation, the downloading of pornography, bullying and intimidation.

A confidential report by the charity said that there had been “a culture of impunity” among some staff in Haiti and concluded that children may have been among those sexually exploited by aid workers. The 2011 report stated: “It cannot be ruled out that any of the prostitutes were under-aged.”

Oxfam was part of a massive international relief effort in Haiti after the earthquake in Port-au-Prince in 2010, which killed 220,000 people, injured 300,000 and left 1.5 million homeless.

One of the men allowed to resign without disciplinary action was Oxfam’s country director there, Roland van Hauwermeiren. The report said that Mr Van Hauwermeiren, 68, admitted using prostitutes at the villa rented for him by Oxfam with charitable funds.

Despite the admission, the charity’s chief executive at the time, Dame Barbara Stocking, offered the Belgian “a phased and dignified exit” because sacking him would have “potentially serious implications” for the charity’s work and reputation. After the internal inquiry, two other men in management were able to resign while four were dismissed for gross misconduct, including over the use of prostitutes at the apartment block where Oxfam housed them.

Oxfam allowed staff to resign to avoid damaging the charity’s reputation - JONATHAN TORGOVNIK/ GETTY IMAGES

A number of sources with knowledge of the case said they had concerns that some of the prostitutes were under age. One said that men had invited groups of young prostitutes to their guesthouse and held sex “parties”. The source claimed to have seen footage from a night there that was “like a full-on Caligula orgy”, with girls wearing Oxfam T-shirts. The charity is understood to have no record of the footage being given to the investigation.

Prostitution is illegal in Haiti and the age of consent is 18. Paying for sex is against Oxfam’s staff code of conduct and in breach of United Nations statements on the behaviour of aid workers, which the charity supported. Oxfam said that it did not report any of the incidents to the Haitian authorities because “it was extremely unlikely that any action would be taken”. None of those accused has been arrested or faced any criminal charges.

The charity said that it disclosed the sexual misconduct to the Charity Commission but the regulator told The Times last night that it never received the final investigation report and Oxfam “did not detail the precise allegations, nor did it make any indication of potential sexual crimes involving minors”. The commission said that it was asking Oxfam to review what happened and “provide us with assurance that it has learnt lessons from past incidents and is taking all necessary steps to ensure risks are minimised”.

An appendix to the investigation report raised a lengthy list of management concerns over the situation in Haiti and asked: “How far back and why did the culture of impunity in Haiti develop . . . Were there signals that could have been picked up earlier?”

The charity acknowledged that staff in Haiti had felt intimidated and unable to raise the alarm. Sources with knowledge of the investigation alleged that the report had been “watered down” and one claimed that Oxfam bosses “deemed it unnecessary to pursue some of the allegations if we could get enough to simply dismiss the individuals”.

Oxfam announced in September 2011 that a small number of staff had left after a misconduct investigation. It stressed that the issues did not concern fraud over its £70 million aid budget in Haiti but did not disclose sexual misconduct. The charity said yesterday: “Oxfam treats any allegation of misconduct extremely seriously. As soon as we became aware of a range of allegations — including of sexual misconduct — in Haiti in 2011 we launched an internal investigation. The investigation was announced publicly and staff members were suspended pending the outcome.” It added that the allegations “that under-age girls may have been involved were not proven”.

Oxfam was founded by Quakers, social campaigners and academics in Oxford in 1942. It is Britain’s fifth largest charity, with an income of £392 million last year. Its British arm employs 5,300 people worldwide and works with 22,000 volunteers.

  

Charity Begins At Home (24/01/18)Image result for charity begins at home + images


After reading The Herald's coverage of the Oxfam report into inequality I came across this post on Twitter by the journalist Ian Birrell.  

Seems like charity really does begin at home, if what Ian Birrell says about the big salaries paid to Oxfam executives is true.

  

Oxfam gives its US boss a pay package worth more than half a million dollars. At least 13 more senior staffers in US alone are on hefty six figure salaries. Then these hypocrites raise more cash & profile by campaigning about inequality. Welcome to the poverty industry


http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/15887116.Scotland_s_wealth_inequality_is__out_of_control__says_new_report/

The gap between the have and the have nots in Scotland widens

By Sandra Dick - The Herald


THE gulf between the haves and have nots in Scotland is deepening amid claims that the nation’s wealth inequality crisis is now out of control.

A new report from Oxfam reveals that in Scotland, the richest one per cent has more wealth than the bottom 50 per cent combined.

Across the globe, 82 per cent of wealth generated last year across the world went in the pockets of the richest one per cent of the global population, with a new billionaire created every two days.

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