UNITED KINGDOM
ITV
Chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee Yvette Cooper MP has called Dame Lowell Goddard’s refusal to give oral evidence about her resignation from the national sexual abuse inquiry “disgraceful.”
Dame Lowell, 67, wrote in a letter which appeared in the media this morning, that she had volunteered detailed written reports instead of oral testimony in a bid to “maintain judicial independence.”
Dame Lowell also wrote: “I am disappointed that there has been no government defence of me in England, despite the fact that information refuting some of the more serious allegations has been held by the Home Office and your committee since the time of my initial recruitment.”
Responding to the letter, Ms Cooper said this was unsatisfactory and an “astonishing response” from a public servant. She added that child abuse survivors “have been let down by the extremely rocky start to this inquiry.”
“Dame Goddard has been paid significant amounts of public money to do an extremely important job which she suddenly resigned from, leaving a series of questions about what has been happening over the last 18 months and why the inquiry got into difficulties,” Ms Cooper said.
Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.