The widow of Alex Salmond – who prevented public life for greater than 40 years – has dramatically damaged her silence and condemned assaults on her late husband.
Moira Salmond, 87, stated the assaults had brought on her and her household “great distress, hurt and pain” and have been “deeply unfair”. And she or he pleaded: “Let Alex rest in peace.”
In a robust and deeply emotional public assertion, she didn’t point out Nicola Sturgeon by identify, however her plea got here after Ms Sturgeon criticised Mr Salmond’s conduct.
In an interview with the Monetary Instances, Ms Sturgeon – who succeeded Mr Salmond as Scotland’s first minister in 2014 – stated: “He would be really rough on people. Many times I intervened to stop him.”
And on ladies who introduced harassment claims towards him, she added: “I’ve seen the impact not just of what they believe happened to them initially but also the impact of the way he then behaved. It’s been pretty hard.”
Mr Salmond was acquitted in 2020 of all sexual assault expenses made towards him. Throughout his trial, his defence argued that his behaviour was generally inappropriate however not prison.
When he was first minister, Ms Sturgeon was his protege, shut ally and deputy earlier than succeeding him after the 2014 independence referendum. However they fell out spectacularly over the allegations towards him.
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Alex and Moira go away the Scottish Parliament chamber after the vote to elect him as first minister in 2007. Pic: Reuters
In her dramatic assertion, issued by legal professionals representing her, Mrs Salmond stated: “My late husband, Alex Salmond, died on 12 October 2024. His memorial service was only six weeks ago.
“I, and the remainder of the household, proceed to grieve. Life won’t ever be the identical for any of us.”
And then she said: “In latest days, it has subsequently brought on me and the broader household nice misery to learn the feedback of those that appear decided to wreck his fame even in loss of life.
“It is difficult for us to understand what motivates those interventions, especially when such comments are made in the knowledge that Alex cannot defend himself as he would certainly have done.
“These attacking him should know that the legislation doesn’t permit us, his household, to guard his fame from being defamed now that he’s gone.”
Her statement continued: “Assaults by the dwelling on the useless will appear to many as deeply unfair. My want, and honest hope, is that these assaults will now cease.
“I am therefore asking those involved to recognise that all they are doing is causing hurt and pain to his family. From this point on, please let Alex rest in peace.”
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Moira Salmond (centre) leaves the funeral service for her husband. Pic: PA
Shortly earlier than Mrs Salmond’s assertion, present First Minister John Swinney was requested in a BBC interview about Ms Sturgeon’s feedback within the Monetary Instances about Mr Salmond’s behaviour.
He replied: “I think it’s pretty well documented that Alex could be quite brisk with people and sometimes we all witnessed that. And sometimes we all had to say look, that’s not on. And that’s the way it was.”
The Salmonds met within the Nineteen Seventies when Moira was his boss on the Scottish Workplace in London. She labored within the Division of Agriculture and Fisheries when he joined as an assistant economist. They married in 1981.
Some 17 years older than Mr Salmond, she has been described as one of the enigmatic figures in Scottish public life. She stayed resolutely within the background and, till now, silent.
In her solely interview, in 1990, she advised the Sunday Submit: “I’m no Glenys Kinnock. I married Alex, not politics. That’s his life and I am happy to be in the background. I share his convictions, but one politician in the family is quite enough.”
When he confronted the sexual misconduct allegations she was stated to have been livid that his former allies and colleagues turned towards him in a case that in the end resulted in his acquittal on all expenses.
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Ms Salmond in a uncommon public look, far left, when Andy Murray gained Wimbledon in 2013. Pic: PA
However regardless of her anger she remained at their residence, a transformed mill in Strichen, Aberdeenshire, throughout his courtroom appearances, showing solely as soon as by his aspect on the ultimate day of his trial in Edinburgh.
Constantly shy of public appearances, there was one notable exception. When Andy Murray gained Wimbledon in 2013 she pulled a big saltire from her purse as she and her husband sat behind David Cameron within the royal field.