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Aberdeen council boss investigates ashes scandal | Aberdeen council boss investigates ashes scandal |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The chief executive of Aberdeen City Council is to investigate which senior managers should be held accountable for its handling of the baby ashes scandal. | |
However BBC Scotland has learned a second external report will not be published. | |
It is thought to point the finger at some senior officials. | It is thought to point the finger at some senior officials. |
Aberdeen City Council was heavily criticised in Dame Elish Angiolini's report in June into the handling of ashes of cremated babies. | |
It described as "abhorrent" the routine practice of cremating babies bodies with unrelated adults. | |
The director responsible for the department which includes Hazlehead crematorium, Pete Leonard, was quoted by investigators referring to "slow cooking" babies for which he has since been heavily criticised. | The director responsible for the department which includes Hazlehead crematorium, Pete Leonard, was quoted by investigators referring to "slow cooking" babies for which he has since been heavily criticised. |
Secret report | |
A report to Aberdeen councillors reveals the chief executive is investigating senior lines of responsibility and will decide what action, if any, to take. | |
It will be discussed on Wednesday. | |
However a second report to the council, understood to be heavily critical of some of those in charge, will remain secret because it contains confidential details of the conduct of staff. | |
That report was commissioned in June this year by chief executive Angela Scott. | |
She said she was willing to meet families affected by what went on at Hazlehead crematorium. | |
The Crown Office is to examine the results of the probe. | |
No ashes | |
Former Lord Advocate Dame Elish Angiolini prepared the 400-page national cremation investigation, which was commissioned by the Scottish government. | |
BBC Scotland revealed in 2013 that no ashes had been offered to the families of infants cremated in Aberdeen over a five-year period. | |
Baby and adult ashes were mixed together and given back to relatives of the adult, while the parents of infants were told there were no ashes. | |
The crematorium at Hazlehead in Aberdeen was among those investigated after it emerged staff at the Mortonhall crematorium in Edinburgh had been burying baby ashes in secret for decades. |
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