During the course of the case, another then trustee and a
now former executive director were also found to have
posted similarly offensive and anti-Semitic social media
comments some time previously, which ran contrary to the
charity’s code of conduct and fell far below the standard
the public expect of charity trustees and staff. All three
individuals have themselves acknowledged that their conduct
was unacceptable and have issued apologies. All parties
have cooperated fully with the Commission.
The Commission reviewed the charity’s response to these
comments and is satisfied that it took swift action,
including to condemn the comments and ensure all three
individuals left their roles, which the individuals did of
their own accord. None has any ongoing involvement with the
charity.
The Commission has overseen significant improvements to the
recruitment and oversight of trustees and senior staff at
the charity. During the compliance case the charity held
pre-planned trustee elections and recruited a new board.
The Commission has met with the new board and is satisfied
that it is making the necessary improvements in terms of
the vetting of trustees, and ongoing oversight over their
social media activities. The charity has also appointed an
Independent Commission to review its wider governance.
The Commission’s case established that the former trustees
and director did not disclose the existence of their social
media profiles or posts to the charity. The Commission is
considering the reasons and circumstances surrounding this
and whether further regulatory action is appropriate.
The regulatory case concluded in January 2021 with the
issuing to the trustees of regulatory advice under s15(2)
of the Charities Act 2011, requiring them to take further
action in a number of areas, including to review and if
necessary update the charity’s code of conduct for
trustees. The Commission will review progress against those
requirements as part of its regular monitoring work.
Tim Hopkins, Assistant Director of Investigations and
Inquiries at the Charity Commission, said:
The posts made by a number of now former senior leaders
within Islamic Relief Worldwide on social media were
clearly offensive, and risked damaging public trust in
Islamic Relief Worldwide and charities more generally.
There is no place for anti-Semitism or any other form of
racism in charity, which is a precious national asset,
that we must work together to protect and promote. We
welcome the improvements the charity has made to its
governance so far and will continue to monitor its
progress.
Ends
Notes to editors:
- The Charity Commission is the independent,
non-ministerial government department that registers and
regulates charities in England and Wales. Its purpose is to
ensure charity can thrive and inspire trust so that people
can improve lives and strengthen society.
- The Commission’s compliance case began in July 2020.
- In September 2020, Islamic Relief Worldwide confirmed
the appointment of QC to
chair an independent
commission into the charity’s approach to trustee vetting
and conduct.