Alex Renton decided to speak out about the abuse he suffered at one of the country’s most elite private schools in 2013, after reading an article that made him realise his abusers could still be teaching – and hurting other children.
Renton thought he had come to terms with the abuse he experienced but realised he owed it to others “who might need revenge, relief from the history – or money” to give them his support.
Since that day, Renton has helped hundreds of fellow survivors of abuse through direct support, his books and now a radio series, In Dark Corners .
As a result of his work, Renton has been in undated with allegations from former schoolchildren from 300 mainly private boarding schools.
In Dark Corners prompted the TV presenter Nicky Campbell to speak out about the “horrific” abuse he experienced and witnessed during his days as a private schoolboy at the fee-paying Edinburgh Academy in the 1970s. Now, following Campbell’s comments, even more people have been in touch.
“I have 50 new emails containing criminal allegations that require serious attention from me,” Renton said . But it i s not just the numbers involved: he was horrified by the “vicious” lengths to which schools go to avoid being held to account for the historical sexual abuse that went on behind their gates.
Esta historia es de la edición July 28, 2022 de The Guardian.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición July 28, 2022 de The Guardian.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
‘We demand a decision now’ Everton shareholders call for an end to 777’s takeover farce’
Everton shareholders have urged the club’s owner, Farhad Moshiri, and the Premier League to end the farce” of a proposed takeover by 777 Partners after the troubled company was accused of fraud worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Ancelotti to spur on Madrid in search of revenge
Carlo Ancelotti said he was on the \"good side\" of European football's grandest rivalry and, on the eve of the Champions League semi-final second leg between Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, revealed the Bavarian club did not support him when he was coach.
Ten Hag exit may be inevitable but when will the cycle stop?
Change is surely coming with Manchester United playing so badly, so often, but this is a club trapped in constant transition, writes
'I contemplated what my life would be without tennis'
Jack Draper on his coaching experiment, his long climb up the rankings and why he considered quitting the sport
US regulator investigates Boeing over quality tests on 787 planes
Boeing faces a new investigation after the planemaker told US regulators it might have failed to carry out some quality inspections properly on its 787 Dreamliner planes.
Disney plans to scale back Marvel films to 'focus more on quality'
Disney said yesterday it planned to release fewer movies and \"focus more on quality\" in its key franchises after a string of high-profile flops at the box office.
P&O Ferries boss asked if he is modern pirate’ for paying crew 4.87 an hour
The boss of P&O Ferries has been asked if he is \"a pirate\" who appears to be \"robbing staff blind\" - as he confirmed to MPs that the group's seafarers have been paid rates lower than he previously told parliament.
Woman pleads not guilty to mushroom poisonings
Erin Patterson, a woman accused of murdering and attempting to murder her relatives by serving them a meal laced with deadly mushrooms, has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Venezuela is first country to lose all of its glaciers in modern era
Venezuela has lost its last remaining glacier as it shrunk so much that scientists reclassified it as an ice patch.
Death toll hits 90 in southern Brazil's worst climate disaster
The death toll from what authorities are calling the worst climate disaster ever to strike southern Brazil has risen to 90, after ferocious rain flooded huge stretches of Rio Grande do Sul state, displacing more than 155,000 people.