JAPAN WASTES IT

Billions of pounds in aid money meant to help the people of Japan rebuild their lives after its tsunami and nuclear disasters have been wasted by Japan’s politicians on projects such as whaling, which Japan does under the guise of “research”

Other priorities the Japanese government has set for expenditure of the aid money include vital renovation of government offices in Tokyo.

Question for givers is whether governments of other disaster-hit countries would be more deserving.

CHARITY DROP

Donations to charities have slumped by 20% because of the recession.

This is one of the findings of the annual survey by the Charities Aid Foundation and the National Council for Voluntary Organisations, which found that donations to charities fell by by £2.3 billion last year to £9.3 billion, figures adjusted for inflation. The proportion of people giving to charity also fell – from 58% to 55% – and the average gift fell from £11 per month to £10 per month.

Meanwhile there have been calls for those not working actively for charity to not be considered for knighthoods, an aspect that would apply to more than 25% of the names on the last honours list. This would not of course have applied to Sir Jimmy Savile, whose unsuitability for the knighthood he was given was due to other factors.

SAVILE UPDATE

As nearly 500 victims of abuse by disgraced BBC celebrity Sir Jimmy Savile have come forward a former BBC governor, Sir Roger Jones has told the Exposure Update documentary programme why he stopped appearances by Savile on the Children in Need TV charity appeal in 1999.

Jones, who was BBC governor from 1997 – 2003 claimed: “The body language of the staff when Jimmy Savile was mentioned was such that I could detect discomfort and I came to the view that they didn’t really want him involved, and I didn’t want him involved either”

Since the two Exposure programmes were aired the NSPCC has had a significant rise in calls on its helpline on aspects of sexual abuse. (0808 800 5000)

CHARITY-FRIENDLY IN SUSSEX

One friendly hotel we’ve found in the pretty town of Midhurst, West Sussex, in the centre of the South Downs National Park, is the Angel Hotel and Bentley’s Grill, a traditional old coaching inn, with rooms dating from the 17th century

This offers charities free use of its £150 per day meeting room for up to 70, formerly the magistrates courtroom till 1880 and still bearing the inscription: “I will not change until I die”, although whether this applied to the magistrates, or the criminals they tried here, is unknown. Charities are also offered discounts on food and beverage consumed. One former consumer here was H.G.Wells, who lodged a few doors away and used the hotel as a setting in some of his books. Continue reading

RAISING IT WITH PORN

The Fort Amherst Heritage Trust, which looks after the historic Amherst Fort in Chatham, Kent has outraged some of its management, trustees and volunteers by raising money, alleged to be £1,200, from allowing Playboy TV to make a pornographic film in the network of tunnels underneath the heritage site.

Some at the charity are claiming that donors have been put off by the booking, said to have been agreed by a member of the management team who has since left. Continue reading

Charity Matters December 2012/January 2013 ISSUE 46

CHARITY WORKSHOP TRAGEDY Fourteen disabled people were killed, and eight more badly burnt in a fire and explosion around 2.00pm on November 26 that….

JAPAN WASTES IT Billions of pounds in aid money meant to help the people of Japan rebuild their lives after its tsunami and nuclear disasters have been wasted by….

CHARITY DROP Donations to charities have slumped by 20% because of the recession. This is one of the findings of the annual survey by the Charities Aid….

SAVILE UPDATE As nearly 500 victims of abuse by disgraced BBC celebrity Sir Jimmy Savile have come forward a former BBC governor, Sir Roger Jones has told the….

CHARITY-FRIENDLY IN SUSSEX One friendly hotel we’ve found in the pretty town of Midhurst, West Sussex, in the centre of the South Downs National Park, is the….

RAISING IT WITH PORN The Fort Amherst Heritage Trust, which looks after the historic Amherst Fort in Chatham, Kent has outraged some of its management….

A CHARITY SHOP IDEA FOR 2013 Does any charity shop, or group, issue vouchers that can be purchased, given as a gift and can only be spent in the issuing charity….

NOW THEN, NOW THEN – Sir Jimmy Savile

Charity fundraiser Sir Jimmy Savile, who died last year and was given a lavish funeral, was also a paedophile who used his celebrity status as the BBC’s top presenter to prey on young girls for sex, some pre-teen.

This was the thrust of an ITV Exposure documentary this month, The Other Side Of Jimmy Savile, that featured a number of women who claimed that they had been abused by Savile, some in his BBC dressing room, when they were very young. Since the programme was aired a plaque to Savile in Scarborough, where his mother lived, was defaced and subsequently taken down, and there have been calls in the press for him to be stripped of his knighthood. Continue reading

SAVE THE (UK) CHILDREN

Some donors to the Save the Children charity have withdrawn their financial support following the charity’s upcoming campaign to help children in poverty in the UK.

The donors are apparently upset that modest funds, around £500,000, are not being spent in Africa, Asia and South America. According to the charity around 3.5 million children in the UK are already in poverty, with one in eight of the poorest going without at least one hot meal a day, and one in seven going without a warm winter coat and new shoes when they need them.

Meanwhile in one of the 120 countries in which Save the Children operates, Pakistan, the government has ordered its staff to leave, claiming that they helped CIA agents to find and kill Osama Bin Laden, an allegation denied by the charity.

SAVE THE SUICIDAL

Around 3,000 middle-aged men kill themselves every year, with men in their 30’s, 40’s and 50’s from disadvantaged backgrounds being at ten times more risk than those from higher socio-economic groups.

This is a finding from Samaritans, the help-line charity, which warns that the decline in manual labour and the loss of a job has robbed some men of their identity, and sense of pride, power and control, aspects that many more are now facing alone, reluctant to seek help.

Samaritans are working with Network Rail in a five-year partnership to reach out to the vulnerable group and reduce suicides on the railways.