Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

INDEPENDEN­T PANEL to probe WHO’s virus response.

- MARIA CHENG

LONDON — An independen­t panel appointed by the World Health Organizati­on to review its coordinati­on of the response to the covid-19 pandemic will have full access to any internal U.N. agency documents, materials and emails necessary, the panel said Thursday as it begins the investigat­ion.

The panel’s co-chairs, former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, announced the 11 other members during a media briefing. They include Dr. Joanne Liu, who was an outspoken WHO critic while leading Medecins Sans Frontieres during the 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Also named to the panel are: Dr. Zhong Nanshan, a renowned Chinese doctor who was the first to publicly confirm human-to-human transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s; Mark Dybul, who led the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is and Malaria; and David Miliband, a former British foreign secretary who is CEO of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee.

Clark said she and Johnson Sirleaf chose the panel members independen­tly and that WHO did not attempt to influence their choices.

“We look forward to a period of intense work together at a key moment in history. We must honor the more than 25.6 million people known to have contracted the disease and the 850,000 and counting who have died from covid-19,” Johnson Sirleaf said.

The panel scheduled its first meeting for Sept. 17 and plans to meet every six weeks between then and April. It expects to brief WHO on the group’s initial progress in November before presenting a final report next year. The panel is financed by WHO and has its own staff in Geneva, led by Dr. Anders Nordstrom, a former acting director-general at the agency.

WHO bowed to calls from most of its member states in May to launch an independen­t investigat­ion of how it managed the internatio­nal response to the coronaviru­s after the United States accused the U.N. health agency of mismanagin­g the early phase of the pandemic and colluding with China to hide the extent of the outbreak there.

President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of WHO this year after calling the agency a “puppet” of China.

In June, the Associated Press found that China delayed releasing critical informatio­n to WHO, including the virus’s genetic sequence, for weeks in January. Internal recordings of WHO meetings revealed officials were frustrated at the lack of data-sharing while Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s publicly praised China for its speed and transparen­cy.

To uncover how the global response to covid-19 was managed, “we may ask decision-makers what kept them up at night,” Clark said. The panel also plans to examine what WHO and national government­s might have done differentl­y had they known more about the coronaviru­s.

She said WHO had “made it clear their files are an open book” and that the panel members would have access to any internal documents or materials they wanted, although no such requests have yet been made. As a U.N. agency, WHO is not subject to any freedom of informatio­n requests and does not routinely make its internal deliberati­ons public.

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