Special Report: Caught in Trump-China feud, WHO leader under siege
Send a link to a friend
[May 15, 2020]
By Kate Kelland and and Stephanie Nebehay
(Reuters) - When the head of the World
Health Organization returned from a whirlwind trip to Beijing in late
January, he wanted to praise China’s leadership publicly for its initial
response to the new coronavirus. Several advisers suggested he tone the
message down, according to a person familiar with the discussions.
After meetings with President Xi Jinping and Chinese ministers, Tedros
Adhanom Ghebreyesus was impressed by their knowledge of the new flu-like
virus and their efforts to contain the disease, which by then had killed
scores in China and started to spread to other countries.
The advisers encouraged Tedros to use less effusive language out of
concern about how he would be perceived externally, the person familiar
with the discussions said, but the director general was adamant, in part
because he wanted to ensure China’s cooperation in fighting the
outbreak.
“We knew how it was going to look, and he can sometimes be a bit naive
about that,” the person said. “But he’s also stubborn.”
The WHO chief’s subsequent lavish public praise of China’s leadership
for its efforts to combat the disease came even as evidence mounted that
Chinese officials had silenced whistleblowers and suppressed information
about the outbreak. His remarks prompted criticism from some member
states for being over the top. U.S. President Donald Trump has led the
charge, accusing the WHO of being “China-centric” and suspending
American funding of the health agency.
The internal debate over the WHO’s messaging around China provides a
window into the challenges facing the 72-year-old United Nations
organization and its leader as they engage in battles on two key fronts:
managing a deadly pandemic and coping with hostility from the United
States, its largest donor.
Interviews with WHO insiders and diplomats reveal that the U.S.
offensive has shaken Tedros at an already difficult time for the agency
as it seeks to coordinate a global response to the pandemic. COVID-19,
the disease caused by the new coronavirus, has killed more than 300,000
people and continues to spread. The virus is thought to have emerged in
a market in Wuhan, China, that sells live animals.
Tedros is “obviously frustrated” by Trump’s move and feels the WHO is
being used as a “political football,” the person familiar with the
discussions said.
"We're in the middle of the fight of our lives - all of us around the
world,” said Michael Ryan, the agency’s top emergencies expert, about
the challenges facing the WHO. In an interview with Reuters, Ryan said
the WHO is focused on helping health systems to cope, developing
vaccines and drugs, and getting economies back on track.
“That's a big enough task to worry about for any organization,” said
Ryan. “I've got to now deal with the potential that we'll have a
significant disruption in funding in front-line essential health
services in many fragile countries in the coming months.”
“It's bending the system,” added Ryan, an Irish doctor and
epidemiologist, “but it's not breaking it.”
The WHO said Tedros was not available for an interview. He has strongly
rejected criticism that he was too quick to praise Beijing, saying
China’s drastic measures slowed the virus’ spread and allowed other
countries to prepare their testing kits, emergency wards and health
systems. He has also said he hoped the Trump administration would
reconsider its freeze, but that his main focus is on tackling the
pandemic and saving lives.
Tedros knew there was a risk of upsetting China’s political rivals with
his visit and his public show of support, according to the person
familiar with the discussions -- an account backed by a WHO official.
But the agency chief saw a greater risk - in global health terms - of
losing Beijing’s cooperation as the new coronavirus spread beyond its
borders, the two sources said.
“That’s the calculation you make,” said the person familiar with the
discussions.
During the two-day Beijing visit, Tedros secured agreement from China’s
leadership to allow WHO experts and a team of international scientists
to travel to China to investigate the origins of the outbreak and find
out more about the virus and the disease it was causing. That delegation
included two Americans.
Ryan, who accompanied the WHO chief on the trip, said he and Tedros both
thought it was important to support China once they became aware of its
containment plans and found them solid. The WHO’s aim was to ensure the
response was implemented “as aggressively, as fast and as successfully
as possible.” He added: “You want to ensure that that commitment to
doing that is absolute and you want to ensure that you keep the lines of
communication open if there are problems with that implementation.”
The WHO, in a follow-up statement, said it expressed appreciation to
China “because they cooperated on issues we had sought support on,”
including isolating the virus and sharing its genetic sequence, which
enabled other countries to develop tests. At a meeting of the WHO’s
executive board in early February, the agency said, “most countries
overwhelmingly praised China for its response to this unprecedented
outbreak."
The Trump administration, which has come under fire at home for its own
handling of the outbreak, isn’t easing off its recent attacks on the WHO
and China.
A senior U.S. administration official told Reuters the WHO “repeatedly
failed to acknowledge the growing threat of COVID-19 and China’s role in
the spread of the virus.” Noting that the United States has been a
larger contributor to the WHO than China, the official said the WHO’s
actions were “dangerous and irresponsible” and had contributed to the
public health crisis “rather than aggressively addressing it.”
The U.S. official alleged that “poor coordination, lack of transparency,
and dysfunctional leadership have plagued its response” to the threat of
COVID-19, among other health crises. “It’s time for the United States to
stop giving millions of dollars to an organization that does more to
impede global health than to advance it.”
China - whose combined contributions to the WHO’s current two-year
budget were due to be about a third of what the United States was
expected to pay - has stood by the WHO chief.
“Since the outbreak of COVID-19, WHO, under the leadership of director
general Tedros, has been actively fulfilling its responsibilities and
upholding an objective, scientific and impartial position,” China’s
foreign ministry said in a statement to Reuters. “We pay tribute to the
professionalism and spirit of the WHO and will continue to firmly
support the WHO's central role in global cooperation against the
pandemic.”
China also rejected American criticism of its response to COVID-19.
Beijing has been “open, transparent and responsible” in sharing
information about the virus, the foreign ministry said. It added Beijing
had maintained close communication and cooperation with the WHO, and it
“appreciates” the positive comments the agency has made about China’s
response to the outbreak.
China’s State Council, or cabinet, didn’t respond to a request for
comment.
“GRINDING OF TEETH”
The WHO has come under fire before. Its 2009 declaration of the H1N1 flu
outbreak as a pandemic later drew criticism from some governments that
it triggered countries to take expensive measures against a disease that
ultimately turned out to be milder than originally thought. The agency
and its then-director general Margaret Chan also faced sharp criticism
for not reacting fast enough to the deadly Ebola outbreak in West Africa
that began in December 2013.
Chan has defended her decision to declare the H1N1 flu outbreak a
pandemic but admitted that the WHO was “overwhelmed” by the Ebola
outbreak, which she has said "shook this organization to its core.”
As COVID-19 has spread, 55-year-old Tedros has become the public face of
the global fight against it, holding near-daily news conferences,
calling heads of state when the virus reaches their doorstep to offer
support, and tweeting frequently to his 1.1 million followers. He teamed
up with pop music superstar Lady Gaga to organize a benefit concert for
health workers that was broadcast online last month.
The son of a soldier, Tedros was born in Asmara, which became the
capital of Eritrea after independence from Ethiopia in 1991. Tedros lost
his younger brother to a childhood disease that the WHO said was
suspected to be measles. A microbiologist by training, Tedros served as
Ethiopia’s minister of health and then foreign minister.
In 2017, Tedros became the first African to lead the WHO, winning the
top job despite potentially damaging questions surfacing late in the
race about whether he had any role in restricting human rights or
covering up cholera outbreaks in Ethiopia. He denied the accusations, as
did Ethiopia.
As head of the global health agency, which has offices in 150 countries
and 7,000 staff, he has drawn praise from world health experts and
senior colleagues for implementing fundamental changes at the WHO,
including re-establishing the emergency-response department that Ryan
now heads.
When a disease breaks out, Tedros is often quick to visit the epicenter
in person. He made at least 10 trips to the Democratic Republic of Congo
during a nearly two-year Ebola epidemic that erupted in August 2018.
That outbreak had been close to being halted before resurging last
month.
A Western diplomat recalled having witnessed Tedros cry after a
Cameroonian doctor working for the WHO was shot dead at an Ebola
hospital in Congo in April 2019. “I've seen that passionate style. He
takes things personally,” the diplomat said.
China informed the WHO on Dec. 31, 2019, of a concerning cluster of
pneumonia cases. On Jan. 14, the WHO said in a tweet that preliminary
investigations by Chinese authorities had found “no clear evidence of
human-to-human transmission.” That statement would later be cited by
Trump as a sign the agency wasn’t being skeptical enough toward China.
The same day, a WHO expert said it was possible there was limited
transmission occurring. On Jan. 22, a WHO mission to China said there
was evidence of human-to-human transmission in Wuhan but more
investigation was needed to understand the full extent.
In late January, Tedros and three colleagues flew to Beijing. “I think
we got the official invitation at 7:30 in the morning and we were on the
airplane at 8:00 p.m.,” said Ryan.
During the Jan. 28 meeting with China’s president, the WHO chief
discussed the sharing of data and biological material, among other
collaboration. Tedros tweeted a photo of himself and Xi shaking hands,
saying they’d had “frank talks” and that Xi had “taken charge of a
monumental national response.”
[to top of second column]
|
Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros
Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during a news conference on the situation
of the coronavirus at the United Nations, in Geneva, Switzerland,
January 29, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
At a press conference the following day in Geneva, Tedros praised
Xi’s leadership, saying he was “very encouraged and impressed by the
president's detailed knowledge of the outbreak.” The WHO chief added
that China was “completely committed to transparency, both
internally and externally.”
By contrast, during the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome, or SARS, in 2003, the WHO chief at the time, Gro Harlem
Brundtland, was openly critical of China when it was slow to report
and share information about the emerging epidemic.
“Tedros has a different approach” than Brundtland, another WHO
official said. “It took a lot of phone calls and patience.”
Brundtland, in a written response to Reuters, said she spoke out
publicly because China hadn’t provided access to the WHO. “This time
was different,” she said, without elaborating.
Publicly criticizing governments can make them reluctant to share
information about disease outbreaks or otherwise cooperate, WHO
veterans say. Michel Yao, head of emergency operations for WHO's
Africa region, said he had seen some nations shut down access to the
WHO when they felt under pressure. This happened on several
occasions when the WHO announced cholera outbreaks in Africa, Yao
told Reuters, without naming the countries. "You lose access to
data, and you lose access to capacity to at least assess the risk of
the particular disease."
But Tedros’ warm words for Beijing grated on some. “When he refers
to China with praise, there is always a grinding of teeth," one
European envoy who attends Tedros’ weekly briefings for diplomats of
member states told Reuters.
DEATH THREATS
The World Health Organization has limited leverage over member
states. It has no legal right to enter countries without their
permission, nor does it have any power of enforcement. So, the main
tools at Tedros’ disposal are politicking and cajoling its 194
member states into abiding by the International Health Regulations
framework they agreed to in 2005.
Tedros has praised a number of governments battling the new
coronavirus, including Korea, Italy, Iran and Japan. On March 30, he
publicly complimented Trump’s daughter and presidential adviser,
Ivanka Trump, for an article she wrote about the U.S emergency
relief bill, tweeting, “very good piece.”
Among WHO insiders, the perception in March was that relations with
the United States were “good,” said the first WHO official. Ryan
said in the interview that communications between the WHO and
Washington in early 2020 were part of the “normal bump and grind of
multilateral organizations.” He added: “I certainly for my part did
not perceive that there was a major, major issue brewing.”
During a March 23 call, Tedros and Trump had a “good and cordial”
discussion regarding the COVID-19 response and “nothing was raised
on the funding issue,” the WHO said in its statement.
Trump initially voiced repeated praise of China and its president
for their response to the crisis. By mid-March, he was ramping up
his criticism of Beijing’s handling of the virus, saying Beijing
should have acted faster to warn the world. His own administration’s
response to the pandemic was coming under wide criticism at the
time, including its troubled effort to roll out tests for the
disease. Trump, who staunchly defends his performance, faces a
re-election campaign as the coronavirus has claimed tens of
thousands of American lives and ravaged the U.S. economy.
At the same time, the United States and other countries had been
pressing WHO's leadership for several months to make stronger
statements about the need for transparency and the timely sharing of
accurate information by member states, “and those concerns were not
acted upon by the WHO,” a Western diplomatic source said.
Andrew Bremberg, U.S. ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva and a former
White House official, had met regularly with Tedros to discuss the
WHO’s response and voice concerns, two European envoys said.
The WHO, in its statement, said Tedros asks all countries to share
information under the international regulations that member states
have agreed to.
On April 7, Trump threatened to withhold WHO funding, criticizing
the agency for being too close to China and too slow to alert the
world to the epidemic, an accusation the agency strongly rejects.
The threat had teeth, as Washington is the WHO’s largest funder. For
the current two-year period, ending in December 2021, it was due to
contribute $553 million in combined membership fees and voluntary
contributions, or 9% of the agency’s approved budget of $5.8
billion, according to the WHO. That’s nearly three times China’s
$187.5 million share, WHO figures show.
Tedros appeared rattled the following day during a regular news
conference, at one point disclosing he had been the target of
“racist” comments and even death threats, and gave long, impassioned
responses to questions from reporters.
In a 12-minute reply to a question about Trump’s criticisms of the
WHO and his funding-cut threat, Tedros called for unity, adding, “we
will have many body bags in front of us if we don't behave.” In
response to accusations that the WHO was too close to China, he
replied, “we’re close to every nation.”
The WHO, in its statement, said Tedros was calm and measured during
the news conference and that he said the U.S. decision was
regrettable. During his three years in office, Trump has criticized
other multinational organizations and withdrawn funding from other
U.N. agencies.
Trump announced the funding freeze a week later. Countries typically
contribute to the WHO through membership dues and voluntary
contributions. A second senior U.S. administration official said
Washington already has paid almost half of the $122 million of the
membership dues it owed for 2020. The official added that Trump’s
freeze means Washington will likely redirect the remaining $65
million in dues payments and more than $300 million in planned
giving to other international organizations.
Two Western diplomats said the U.S. funding suspension is more
harmful politically to the WHO than to the agency’s current
programmes, which are funded for now. But they also voiced concern
that the freeze could have long-term impact, especially on central
programmes such as those targeting polio, AIDS and immunization that
are supported by Washington’s contributions.
“It has been a big blow to WHO and to Tedros,” said the second WHO
official.
Tedros, asked about relations with the United States, told reporters
on May 1: “We are actually in constant contact and we work
together.” A WHO spokeswoman said dialogue and technical
collaboration continue between the agency and Washington. The U.S.
mission to the U.N. in Geneva declined comment.
“SHOT IN THE ARM”
Trump isn’t the only one prodding the WHO. Australian Prime Minister
Scott Morrison has called for an independent review of the outbreak
and the WHO’s response. The European Union has proposed a resolution
calling for a timely evaluation of the pandemic response, including
by the WHO, an idea that’s due to be considered at the WHO’s annual
assembly of ministers next week.
The WHO said Tedros has promised to conduct a post-pandemic review
of the agency’s performance, including by the WHO’s independent
oversight body, which is standard practice after a health crisis.
But so far, most major donors have closed ranks around the WHO.
France, Germany and Britain have voiced support for the agency,
saying now is the time to focus on fighting the outbreak rather than
apportion blame. A German government official described the U.S.
approach of focusing on past events rather than joining the fight
against the outbreak as “absurd.” French President Emmanuel Macron
is supportive of the WHO because he believes it is essential to an
effective response to the crisis, one of his advisers said.
China’s foreign ministry, in its statement, said that Beijing is
supportive of the WHO director general setting up a review committee
to evaluate the global response to COVID-19 “at an appropriate time
after the pandemic is over.” It added it objects to the eagerness of
some countries to start reviewing the WHO and trace the origins of
the virus, which it said were attempts to “politicize the epidemic”
and interfere with the WHO’s work.
WHO insiders saw a victory of sorts in a webcast launch of an agency
initiative on April 24 that turned into a public show of support for
the organization and its leader. During the event, which was on the
topic of accelerating the development of tests, drugs and vaccines
against COVID-19, world leaders appearing via video link offered
thanks and praise to Tedros and the WHO.
France’s president, addressing Tedros as “my friend,” urged major
countries to come together to support the initiative, including
China and the United States. “The fight against COVID-19 is a common
human good and there should be no division in order to win this
battle,” said Macron.
“It felt like a shot in the arm,” the second WHO official said. “It
felt like there are people out there who are battling with us.”
(Reporting by Kate Kelland in London and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva
; Additional reporting by the Beijing Newsroom, Steve Holland in
Washington, D.C., Dawit Endeshaw and Giulia Paravicini in Addis
Ababa, Katharine Houreld in Nairobi, Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Michel
Rose in Paris and Kirsty Needham and Colin Packham in Sydney.;
Editing by Cassell Bryan-Low)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |