Oxfam International boss says Haiti
scandal 'breaks my heart'
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[February 12, 2018]
By Angela Moore
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The executive director
of Oxfam International said on Sunday she was heartbroken by a sexual
misconduct scandal in Haiti involving aid workers that prompted
Britain's government to threaten to cut off aid funding to charities.
Oxfam, one of Britain's biggest charities, has condemned the behavior of
some former staff in Haiti after a newspaper report said aid workers
paid for sex while on a mission to help those affected by the 2010
earthquake.
Britain's aid minister said the government would cut aid funding from
any charity that did not comply with a new review into their work
overseas, calling reports of sexual exploitation in the sector "utterly
despicable."
Winnie Byanyima, who became executive director of Oxfam International in
2013, said she was saddened by what took place in 2010 and that it could
not happen under systems and rules put in place since.
"I feel deeply, deeply hurt. ... What happened in Haiti was a few
privileged men abusing the very people they were supposed to protect -
using the power they had from Oxfam to abuse powerless women. It breaks
my heart," Byanyima said in an interview with Reuters TV in New York.
"We want to restore trust. We want to build that trust. We are
committing to be honest, to be transparent and to be accountable in
addressing this issue of sexual misconduct. We are in a different place
today," she said.
British Aid Minister Penny Mordaunt said on Sunday that she would write
to British charities that work overseas demanding they declare any
problems relating to the duty they have to protect their staff and the
people they work with from harm and abuse - so-called safeguarding.
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Oxfam International Executive Director Winnie Byanyima poses for a
portrait following an interview in New York, NY, U.S., February 11,
2018. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Byanyima said charities must stop people who do not share their
values from joining their organizations.
"We need to do more in terms of investigations and sharing the
results of those investigations so that offenders don't go on to
offend in other organizations," she said.
She said Oxfam would share with the relevant authorities all the
information it had relating to the 2010 incident.
"You know it's not within our power to return people who are not our
staff to Haiti to face prosecution," she said. "But we will avail
everything that we know from the investigation to whoever authority,
whichever authority wants to have this."
(Reporting by Angela Moore; Writing by Daniel Wallis; Editing by
Peter Cooney)
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