Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

WHO sexual misconduct victim slams response

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KAMPALA, Uganda – A woman who says she was victimized by a World Health Organizati­on doctor during a recent Ebola outbreak in Congo said she is shocked that no senior officials were punished for the sexual abuse and exploitati­on claims involving dozens of women in the conflict-ridden country.

On Monday, the AP reported on a confidential U.N. report that excused senior staffers for their mishandlin­g of another case due to a “loophole” in how WHO defines victims of such behavior.

Anifa, a young Congolese woman who worked at an Ebola treatment center in Beni during the outbreak, said she could not understand WHO’s seeming excusing of misconduct.

“It is a shame for WHO to give work to the kinds of men who do not respect women,” she said, declining to share her full name, for fear it could hurt her future job prospects. Anifa said she had been offered a job by a WHO doctor in exchange for sex during the Ebola epidemic, but refused. The AP does not identify victims of sexual abuse.

“Perhaps WHO does not consider us because we are Africans?” she asked. “As long as I am alive, I will hate the entire World Health Organizati­on until (the perpetrato­rs) are charged and punished.”

Paula Donovan, co-leader of the Code Blue campaign, which seeks to hold the U.N. accountabl­e for sexual offenses, said WHO member countries looked the other way regarding the agency’s sexual misconduct charges because they could not afford to weaken the institutio­n during the pandemic.

“Countries could not go after WHO because it was doing what the U.S. and other rich countries would not do during COVID, which is try to figure out how to get vaccines to the poor.”

She said donor countries had likely made a disturbing calculatio­n about the costs of responding to global health crises. “It is very depressing, but officials have essentiall­y concluded this is the price that has to be paid, that some women are going to be sexually exploited.”

The U.N. report was focused on a case first reported by The AP in May 2021, involving Dr. Jean-Paul Ngandu, who worked on the Ebola response in northeaste­rn Congo in 2019. Shortly after his arrival, Ngandu met a young woman at a local restaurant. The two had sex later that evening, but the relationsh­ip soured, and the woman and her aunt complained to WHO that Ngandu had impregnate­d her.

AP obtained a copy of a notarized agreement between Ngandu and the woman, signed by two WHO staffers, in which he agreed to cover her health care costs and buy her land.

After concerns about the Ngandu case were raised to WHO’s Geneva headquarte­rs, “a decision was made not to investigat­e the complaint on the basis that it did not violate WHO’s (sexual exploitati­on and abuse) policy,” the U.N. report said. The report said this was because the woman was not a “beneficiary” of WHO, meaning she didn’t receive any humanitari­an or emergency aid, and thus, did not qualify as a victim under WHO policy.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s has said repeatedly he is “outraged” by reports of sexual misconduct. But to date, no senior staffers linked to the sexual abuse allegation­s in Congo’s 2018-2020 Ebola outbreak – where more than 80 workers under the direction of WHO and other agencies were found to have abused or exploited women – have been fired.

A panel appointed by Tedros to investigat­e the Congo sex abuse claims found numerous allegation­s of sexual assault by WHO staffers, including women forced to have abortions by their attackers and a 13-year-old girl who said a WHO driver took her to a hotel where she was raped.

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