WHO dismisses lead COVID origins investigator for sexual misconduct
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[May 04, 2023]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organization said on Wednesday that
it has dismissed a senior scientist, known for his role as the head of
an international mission to China to probe the origins of COVID-19, for
sexual misconduct.
The U.N. agency said Peter Ben Embarek, a Danish scientist who
previously headed up its 'One Health' initiative on diseases jumping
from animals to humans, was removed from his post last year. In a
response to Reuters, Ben Embarek said he contested the accusation of
harassment and was challenging the sanction.
"Peter Ben Embarek was dismissed last year following findings of sexual
misconduct against him that were substantiated by investigations, and
corresponding disciplinary process," said WHO spokesperson Marcia Poole.
Poole said the cases that led to the dismissal occurred in 2015 and
2017. The agency was first made aware of them in 2018. The WHO did not
provide further details of the misconduct allegations.
Ben Embarek said that a single incident in 2017 "was settled immediately
in a friendly way." He said he could not comment further as both he and
the WHO are bound by confidentiality agreements until a resolution is
reached.
"I am not aware of any other complaints and no other complaints have
ever been brought to my attention," Ben Embarek said in a digital
message. "I duly contest the qualification of harassment and I am quite
hopeful in the defense of my rights."
Ben Embarek is the most senior WHO official known to have been dismissed
since the U.N. agency launched a series of reforms to improve its
response to sexual misconduct. He has often been quoted in the media
about the origins of the pandemic. His dismissal can be appealed through
the U.N. internal justice system.
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Peter Ben Embarek, a member of the World
Health Organization (WHO) team tasked with investigating the origins
of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), holds a chart during the
WHO-China joint study news conference at a hotel in Wuhan, Hubei
province, China February 9, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
He was the lead WHO representative
on a trip to China in 2021 that aimed to investigate where COVID-19
came from. The team made global headlines with their conclusion that
bats were the most likely initial hosts, eventually leading to a
pandemic in humans. They had also determined that a leak of the
virus from a laboratory in China was "highly unlikely," despite
calls from various scientists to probe that possibility.
Ben Embarek later said that there had been some political pressure
on the team, including from outside China, but that nothing in the
report had been changed as a result. He did not identify the source
of such pressure.
The WHO has overhauled its handling of sexual abuse and misconduct
cases after a 2021 inquiry found that dozens of aid workers,
including some from WHO, had been involved in sexual abuse and
exploitation during an Ebola crisis in the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
The agency said that people are more willing to come forward about
sexual misconduct and that it is taking action where allegations are
substantiated. It has started a monthly report on disciplinary
action taken.
(Reporting by Emma Farge, writing by Jennifer Rigby in London;
Editing by Alistair Bell)
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