Baby ‘saved from traffickers’ was borrowed by charity for photos

Authored by bbc.co.uk and submitted by diacewrb
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An ex-police officer who claims to save children from human traffickers has faked stories to raise money for his charity, the BBC has discovered.

Adam Whittington, founder of Project Rescue Children (PRC) says he has helped more than 700 children in countries including Uganda, Kenya and The Gambia.

But BBC File on 4 has found that some of these children have never been trafficked, and that funds raised - sometimes with the help of celebrity supporters - have not always reached children in need.

PRC has described our allegations that it does not support children as being “completely without merit, misleading and defamatory”.

Our investigation shows Mr Whittington, a British-Australian citizen, has misled donors in a variety of ways - including by raising funds for a baby supposedly rescued from people traffickers, who has actually been with her mother all along. The mother, who lives in poverty, says she and her daughter have never received any money from PRC.

Mr Whittington started working in child rescue two decades ago, after leaving the Metropolitan Police.

He set up a company retrieving children taken abroad by a parent following custody disputes, but later switched his attention to trafficked or abused children.

Both his and PRC’s social media pages have accumulated 1.5 million followers and attracted celebrity support, thanks to their shocking and sometimes disturbing content.

Sam Faiers from ITV’s The Only Way is Essex became a PRC ambassador, and last September was taken to Uganda to meet orphaned and destitute children.

The_Code_Hero on July 16th, 2024 at 22:42 UTC »

By the title, I had inferred a charity borrowed a baby to take photos of it, then took off to traffic it. Turns out I was way off lol

RamblingSimian on July 16th, 2024 at 18:32 UTC »

Good work by the BBC. I guess, if you're a fraudster, child trafficking in remote areas is a good story to sell.