Shropshire Star

Mordaunt confronted by protester at aid sector safeguarding conference

The International Development Secretary was accused of ignoring those leading the fight against sex abuse in the aid sector.

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Aid

International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt has been confronted by a protester as she addressed a conference on sex abuse in the aid sector.

Alexia Pepper de Caires – a former whistleblower at Save the Children – walked on to the platform where Ms Mordaunt was speaking to complain that those leading the fight against abuse were being ignored.

“This platform is not for you today. It is for the people doing this,” she told the minister.

She said she was “disgusted” to learn Save the Children was to play a major role in the establishment of a new global system of criminal records checks for aid workers, even though it was still under investigation by the Charity Commission.

Cabinet meeting
Ms Mordaunt said it was important that all voices were heard (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Ms Mordaunt, who calmly listened to her, said she had been unaware of the concerns she raised, and offered to give up her second speaking slot at the end of the conference so she and her colleagues could address it.

Ms Pepper de Caires – who drew applause from the international audience at the Queen Elizabeth II Centre in London – was finally led from the stage by officials without further protest.

Afterwards she told the Press Association: “The signals were that a number of women who have been more radically vocal about what has been happening were not being reached out to.

“I thought all along that this conference needed to be more than just a shiny, glossy piece for the cameras and press to say all the right things are being done.

“It was dishonest, it is ineffective and it won’t result in change.”

Ms Mordaunt said she was “very sorry” that some people had felt excluded from the event.

“The only thing I could do today to rectify that – because I think it is important that their voices are heard – is to give them a platform,” she told reporters.

“I personally didn’t know of their concern until today. We will do everything we can to ensure that people are able to speak up, they are able to articulate their concerns.”

She said that Save the Children had not received any Government funding in relation to the new global register, being established by the Department for International Development and Interpol, announced earlier this week.

“It is not the case that Save are getting funding from us,” she said.

After the conference, Ms Mordaunt said: “Let there be no doubt this international summit was not about gathering promises to tinker around the edges. This is about setting in place a fundamental rewrite, from root to branch, of the way the aid sector operates.

“It is incredibly important that as we work to tackle sexual exploitation and abuse in the aid sector we put the voices of victims and survivors first. Which is why we dedicated the first half of the day to listening to their accounts and hearing from those on the front line.

“This is not the end of the process. There is still a huge amount of work to do but these commitments and the new tools we have outlined today send a message to perpetrators – your time is up, there is nowhere to hide.”

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