WHO's Tedros under donor pressure to act quickly on Congo sex scandal -
diplomats
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[October 01, 2021]
By Stephanie Nebehay and Hereward Holland
GENEVA (Reuters) - The head of the World
Health Organization is coming under U.S.-led pressure to act quickly on
a damning report on a sexual assault scandal that has engulfed it and
other aid agencies in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Western
diplomats say.
More than 80 aid workers, a quarter of whom were employed by the WHO,
were involved in sexual abuse and exploitation during an Ebola epidemic
in eastern Congo, an independent commission said on Tuesday.
The probe, launched by WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, was
prompted by an investigation last year by the Thomson Reuters Foundation
and The New Humanitarian in which more than 50 women accused aid workers
from the WHO and other agencies of demanding sex in exchange for jobs
between 2018-2020.
The commission's report - delayed by a month due to fresh allegations
and a widening investigation - was issued a week after the period for
nominating the next WHO director-general closed.
The United States has initiated an effort among major WHO donors to
issue a joint statement about their expectations and calling for WHO and
Tedros to take swift action, several Western diplomats told Reuters,
adding that consultations were under way with capitals. "The U.S. is
leading," said one.
Tedros gained wide support for a second five-year term, formally
nominated by 17 EU members including major donors Germany and France and
backed by countries in other regions, diplomats told Reuters on Sept. 23
as the deadline passed. The United States also backs him, they said.
His native Ethiopia has not supported his re-election bid, due to
friction over the Tigray conflict, leaving Europe to formalise the
nomination. He is still expected to be re-elected in the wake of the
scandal, diplomats said.
Under WHO rules, the envelopes are to remain sealed until after Oct. 29,
meaning it is possible that a country might have nominated another
candidate for the May election.
Western diplomats voiced concern at the WHO "management failure" during
the sexual violence in Congo. Middle managers were criticised but the
top echelon including Tedros has emerged without being accused or
directly linked, they added.
"The report is so bad. But it seems to clear him and senior management
even by name," a Western diplomat told Reuters. "Tedros really has to do
his part and show leadership and take action as soon as possible."
Another Western diplomat told Reuters: "It makes for sobering reading,
like a throwback to another era." She added: "I have no reason to doubt
Tedros is committed to dealing with it."
France has issued a statement urging Tedros to make good on his
commitment to submit an action plan addressing the inquiry's
recommendations within 10 days.
Tedros, who visited Congo 14 times during the Ebola epidemic, told a
press conference on Tuesday that no one had raised the allegations. He
again pledged "zero tolerance" for sexual exploitation and apologised to
the victims but declined to say whether he was considering resigning.
A senior official in Kenya’s foreign ministry dismissed the notion that
his government would withdraw its support for Tedros’ re-nomination.
“Really? Isn’t that a little silly?” Macharia Kamau, principal secretary
in Kenya’s foreign ministry, said in a text message when asked if
Kenya’s stance on Tedros had changed due to the revelations.
Okello Oryem, Uganda's state minister for foreign affairs, told Reuters
that "Tedros is an African candidate" and that Uganda would not withdraw
support.
"The NGOs making these allegations are from Western countries. Some of
whom may not want Tedros to be there. It might be a plot by some Western
countries to deny Africa this position," he said.
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WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attends a news
conference after a ceremony for the opening of the WHO Academy, in
Lyon, France, September 27, 2021. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
"Tedros can not be held accountable for something
that happened thousands of mile away in Congo."
U.N. IMMUNITY?
The commission found that at least 21 of 83 suspected perpetrators
were employed by the WHO, and that the abuses, which included nine
allegations of rape, were committed by both national and
international staff.
A spokesman for the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said that it was
seeking information on aid workers from agencies other than WHO
involved in the abuse, but declined to specify whether its own staff
were implicated.
"We remain steadfast in our commitment to end sexual exploitation
and abuse in the aid sector, to provide victims with assistance, and
to hold perpetrators accountable," he said.
Congo's health minister, Jean-Jacques Mbungani Mbanda, said in a
statement that it was now for authorities to "hold account all the
presumed authors of these reprehensible acts".
A former senior UN official who worked in Congo during the Ebola
crisis said: "They should be fired, stripped of their UN immunity
and handed over to the national prosecution authorities. They've
committed crimes in that country and are subject to punishments of
that country."
"It's an endemic problem in the UN so it's not particular to the
WHO, and so it's not particular to Tedros. This happens every time
in every kind of deployment to the Congo, people are getting away
with sexual exploitation and abuse."
Most UN personnel enjoy functional immunity, which means they can't
be taken to court for anything they have done as part of their work.
But the secretary-general has has the power to waive that immunity
if it "would impede the course of justice".
The first Western diplomat said: "DNA samples were taken. I hope
there is evidence to follow up."
Activists said that sexual abuse and harassment were common in Congo
and called for reforms. There have been many incidents of alleged
sexual abuse by UN peacekeepers in several missions in Africa in the
past decade.
"Sexual abuse against women in exchange for access to employment or
other benefits seems to be a widespread phenomenon in the DRC,
including in the public administration, colleges and universities,
churches, and businesses. It is the same within the UN system,
international NGOs, and local organisations," said Jean-Mobert Senga,
DR Congo researcher at Amnesty International.
"...WHO and other UN institutions should now implement the report’s
recommendations and take any step necessary to prevent such abuses
from happening again, in DRC or elsewhere," he said.
(Additional reporting by Maggie Fick in Nairobi, Elias Biryabarema
in Kampala and John Irish in Paris; writing by Stephanie Nebehay;
editing by Nick Macfie)
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