May's deputy denies report pornography was found on office computer

UK

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LONDON (Reuters) – Prime Minister Theresa May’s most senior minister has denied an allegation that police found pornography on one of his computers in the Houses of Parliament in 2008 as the British government struggles to contain a scandal about sexual harassment.

FILE PHOTO: Cabinet Office Minister, Damian Green, arrives on the opening day of the Conservative Party Conference, in Manchester, Britain October 1, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

First Secretary of State Damian Green said the claims by a former senior police officer in a Sunday newspaper were “completely untrue” and “political smears.”

“This story is completely untrue and comes from a tainted and untrustworthy source,” Green said in a statement on his Twitter page. The claims amount to “little more than an unscrupulous character assassination,” he said.

The Sunday Times reported on its front page that former Metropolitan police assistant commissioner Bob Quick alleged the material was discovered by officers during an inquiry into government leaks in 2008.

Quick, who was involved in the leak investigation, told the newspaper that officers had reported finding the “extreme” pornography on a parliamentary computer from Green’s office.

The claims against one of the prime minister’s closest allies risks deepening a growing sexual harassment scandal that led Britain’s defence minister Michael Fallon to resign last Wednesday.

FILE PHOTO: First Secretary of State, Damian Green, addresses the Conservative Party Conference, in Manchester, Britain October 1, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

Fallon said his behaviour has “fallen short” of the standards expected by the British military.

May’s minority government is already struggling with divisions over Britain’s departure from the European Union.

Britain’s interior minister Amber Rudd said the issue would be investigated by the Cabinet Office on Monday and she denied the government was on the verge of collapse if Green resigned.

Rudd said Britain needed to address allegations of sexual harassment in the corridors of power.

“It is something that will take place, in terms of clearing out Westminster of that sort of behaviour, and Westminster, including the government, will be better off after it,” she said.

Green, 61, has also denied a previous allegation that he made an inappropriate sexual advance on a young woman.

He said it was not true that he had touched the woman’s knee and told her that his “wife was very understanding” during a meeting in a pub in which the pair discussed her career aspirations and gossiped about sexual affairs in parliament.

Reporting By Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Keith Weir

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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