Kuwait Times

3 vie for top WHO post

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GENEVA: A British physician, an Ethiopian former health minister and a Pakistani expert in non-communicab­le diseases are the three finalists vying for the top job at the World Health Organizati­on in its first-ever election on Tuesday, aspiring to land a key UN post that confers great power to set worldwide medical priorities - and great responsibi­lity as the world’s go-to person when emergencie­s like Ebola, Zika and SARS strike.

For the first time, WHO’s governing body made up of 194 member states will choose from three candidates - not one pre-selected by its executive board, as in past years. The closed-door vote is perhaps the highlight event of the 10-day World Health Assembly, which will also lay out strategies on issues like the fight against polio, preparedne­ss for pandemic flu, and antimicrob­ial resistance.

Many are looking for further reform at WHO after the decade-long tenure of Dr Margaret Chan, a politicall­y savvy native of Hong Kong whose tenure nonetheles­s has been blighted by a flawed response to the Ebola outbreak in three west African countries that killed more than 11,000 people. Politics, as much as policy prescripti­ons, will be in the minds of many government envoys as voting begins Tuesday afternoon. Here’s a look at the candidates for the next five-year term starting July 1:

David Nabarro

The British physician led the UN response to some of the biggest health crises in recent years, including bird flu and Ebola. Although he has years of experience dealing with outbreaks, critics say his decades of work at WHO make him too much of an insider and that he may be unable to introduce the radical change needed to overhaul the agency.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s

A former health minister from Ethiopia, he would be the first WHO director-general from Africa and is believed to have wide support from many African member states. Ghebreyesu­s is credited with expanding Ethiopia’s health system and helping introduce initiative­s that cut malaria deaths. The only non-medical doctor in the running, he has also been dogged by allegation­s that he covered up cholera outbreaks during his administra­tion, despite internatio­nal regulation­s requiring countries to report outbreaks of the bacterial disease.

Sania Nishtar

A Pakistani doctor, she has worked on noncommuni­cable diseases for years and once served as a government minister responsibl­e for issues including health, science and informatio­n technology. Unlike her competitor­s, Nishtar has little experience with outbreaks. During her campaign, she issued 10 pledges for action, including “transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in all areas of its work” and a promise that the WHO leadership “will not be subject to special interests.”— AP

 ??  ?? David Nabarro, UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Ebola
David Nabarro, UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Ebola
 ??  ?? Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, Ethiopian former Minister of Health
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, Ethiopian former Minister of Health
 ??  ?? Pakistani doctor Sania Nishtar
Pakistani doctor Sania Nishtar

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