International

Miliband faces flak over charity’s unpaid internships

Miliband faces flak over charity’s unpaid internships

May 16, 2021 | 12:48 AM
David Miliband
The former Labour MP David Miliband is facing criticism after it emerged that the charity he runs, for which he was paid more than £700,000, is offering unpaid internships at its headquarters in New York City.Miliband, the chief executive of the refugee charity International Rescue Committee (IRC), has previously been labelled “million-dollar Miliband” after his pay packet rose to $911,796 in 2019, then worth more than £700,000.This was an increase of nearly £200,000 on the previous two years, and two-and-a-half times the amount his predecessor received. While the full-time internships, which range from eight to 12 weeks, are based in the US, the charity receives millions in UK aid.The intern roles, based on a 37.5-hour week, are being advertised in a variety of departments in the IRC including advocacy, executive offices and violence prevention and response, the Times first reported.Applicants are required to have at least two years of undergraduate-level education.The adverts, which are promoted on the UN jobs website, say: “Our internships are unpaid. However, these are great opportunities to make a meaningful impact through work and start a career in non-profit.”Campaigners calling for the end to unpaid internships argue that they shut many less advantaged young people out of top careers.In London, an unpaid internship costs young people more than £1,000 a month due to rising rents, according to Sutton Trust research.Vicky Browning, the head of the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations, said: “Unpaid internships are opportunities which are largely restricted to those with enough financial backing to support them. This reinforces inequality and makes them a barrier to social mobility, so we don’t recommend charities offer them.”Ellie Mae O’Hagan, the director of the thinktank Class (Centre for Labour & Social Studies), said the UK government should not support charities that do not pay everyone who works for them.A spokesperson for IRC UK said: “IRC UK does not use unpaid interns and is a separate legal entity from the IRC’s global headquarters in the US.”The IRC in the US and David Miliband have also been approached for a comment.
May 16, 2021 | 12:48 AM