ACID ATTACK PROVIDES INSPIRATION

Charity campaigner, TV presenter and author Katie Piper, a former model, will be telling visitors to the upcoming office* exhibition the story of the horrific sulphuric acid attack in Golders Green, London 2008 that left her facially disfigured.

The two men responsible for the attack, a boyfriend she met through Facebook who raped and stabbed her, and his accomplice, are currently serving life sentences and the plucky 29-year-old has rebuilt her life, starting the Katie Piper Foundation for burns victims in 2009. Continue reading

DIRTY MONEY?

The Natural History Museum has raised questions over its judgement after accepting sponsorship for a photographic exhibition from a company voted by corporate watchdog The Public Eye as having “the most contempt for the environment and human rights” in the world.

The company, Brazilian mining giant Vale, in involved in the building of the Amazon Belo Monte dam, which critics say will destroy some of the environments and the lives of indigenous people living there, both captured in the Genesis photo exhibition at the museum this summer.

HAIR TODAY

Women are being encouraged to grow their underarm hair this month as part of a campaign to raise awareness of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), one symptom of which is excessive hair growth, or hirsutism.

Armpits4August hopes to “lessen traditional attitudes of shame about female body hair” and to raise funds for PCOS charity Verity.

Charity Matters August/September 2013 ISSUE 50

CHILD ABUSE- THE PRICE OF TURNING A BLIND EYE “My body belongs to me and no one can touch it without my permission” is the new “Underwear Rule” launched by …

ON THE OTHER HAND The NSPCC has criticised a Crown Prosecution Service barrister who was prosecuting a 41-year-old man for having sex with a 13-year-old …

MONEY WORRIES INCREASE Health charity Mind has warned that depression caused by money worries has increased by a third in the last year…

NICE LITTLE EARNERS Charities that pay their top executives in excess of £100,000 a year risk bringing the sector into disrepute, according to the Charity Commission…

ACID ATTACK PROVIDES INSPIRATION Charity campaigner, TV presenter and author Katie Piper, a former model, will be telling visitors to the upcoming…

DIRTY MONEY? The Natural History Museum has raised questions over its judgement after accepting sponsorship for a photographic exhibition from a company voted by …

HAIR TODAY Women are being encouraged to grow their underarm hair this month as part of a campaign to raise awareness of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), one …

CHARITY FINANCE CONFERENCE This is being held on Tuesday October 29th at Central Hall, Westminster and comprises 44 sessions on charity property …

FREE SEMINAR A free morning seminar on governance will be of interest to some charities and takes place at 60, Goswell Road, London on Thursday September 19th …

LURKING DANGER

Convictions for animal cruelty and neglect increased by a third between 2011 and 2012, according to the RSPCA which says it is struggling to cope with what it calls “the growing animal cruelty crisis” According to RSPCA chief executive Gavin Grant judges need to take cases of abuse far more seriously than they currently do.

There is a view that those who are cruel to vulnerable animals will also have the capacity for cruelty to vulnerable people, including children, a view backed by research into the records of violent criminals, who will often have early convictions for animal cruelty. Continue reading

MIS-USES OF CHARITIES

Charities used for avoidance of tax, and business rates have been in the news recently.

The Cup Trust was opened in the British Virgin Islands in 2009 but closed by a judge after it emerged that it had raised £176 million but only given £55,000 to good causes. HM Revenue and Customs have told the public accounts committee of MPs that it investigates more than 300 such schemes every year, suggesting that the Cup Trust is just one of many using charities to cloak their real purpose. Continue reading

BANKING ON BEING FED

According to the Trussell Trust, the UK’s largest food crisis charity the number of people getting help from their food banks tripled to 350,000 since last year and was 100,000 more than expected.

The trust, which has 345 food banks is opening another three every week but says that up to 650 more will be needed nationwide to cope with the increased demand. This commonly is coming from people who have had their benefit reduced, or cut in the government’s reforms to welfare, as well as those whose benefit payments have been delayed, and the self-employed whose businesses are in trouble because of late or non-payment by customers. According to the Dept. for Work and Pensions the increases are also due to jobcentres referring people to food banks, and the greater awareness of them due to the successful marketing of them. Continue reading

UNFASHIONABLE ETHICS

Despite the best efforts of charity People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) real fur, skinned from real animals and some alive at the time, is back in fashion for the rich.

According to a happy Frank Zilberkweit, head of fur designer and retailer Hockley, real fur is back and Harrods, for those who can afford to shop there is going to be “awash with fur” from next month, owing to greatly increased demand from lucrative Asian markets which has pushed up the profit in skinning mink and fox as well as a billion rabbits and two million cats and dogs.

Ethics, for some, will always take second place to fashion.