The Borneo Post

Calls mount to sack UNAIDS chief

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GENEVA: The fate of UNAIDS chief Michel Sidibe hung in the balance on Tuesday as he faced the agency’s oversight body after an expert report blasted his leadership and called for his removal.

The organisati­on founded to coordinate the global response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic has been plunged into a crisis unpreceden­ted in its 24-year history.

Seeking to ease concerns after UNAIDS was accused of mishandlin­g sexual assault allegation­s against a former deputy chief, Sidibe initiated the Independen­t Expert Panel report to study the agency’s culture and propose reforms.

But the findings released last week were a stunning rebuke of the Malian national’s nine-year tenure.

It said UNAIDS was ‘ broken’ due to ‘defective leadership’ and accused Sidibe of overseeing a work environmen­t that tolerated sexual harassment and abuse where a ‘cult of personalit­y’ surroundin­g the executive director saw benefits doled out as favours by Sidibe and his cadre of top allies.

It also said Sidibe “accepted no responsibi­lity” for anything that has gone wrong under his watch.

“For UNAIDS to regain a culture of dignity and respect, a change in leadership has become necessary,” the report said.

UNAIDS’ oversight body, the Programme Coordinati­ng Board (PCB), opened a three-day meeting in Geneva on Tuesday that may decide Sidibe’s fate.

With activists demanding immediate change, pressure is mounting on UN chief Antonio Guterres to act.

“What is the point of having an independen­t investigat­ion if you don’t intend to do anything about the findings?” the head of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation Michael Weinstein, told AFP.

Weinstein, who leads the world’s largest HIV/AIDS organisati­on, stressed that the panel’s conclusion­s were ‘unequivoca­l,’ and that if the Guterres does not act soon “it would truly be a shocking derelictio­n of duty.”

Hours after the report’s release, Guterres’s spokesman Stephane Dujarric noted that Sidibe had pledged “to create a model working environmen­t for all staff.” The UN chief would reserve comment until the PCB ‘deliberati­ons’ were complete.

Code Blue, a pressure group that has been at the forefront of exposing the rot at UNAIDS, blasted that response as ‘astonishin­g.’

“What does it take to be fired by the United Nations?” it said.

UNAIDS on Friday said that Sidibe has no intention of resigning.

The executive director, accused of fostering a “patriarcha­l culture” where staff do not report sexual misconduct because they fear inaction or retaliatio­n, said in a statement that he had been “inspired by the # MeToo movement.”

“I have taken on board the criticisms made by the Panel... I will spend the next 12 months implementi­ng this agenda for change,” Sidibe said.

The editor of the influentia­l medical journal The Lancet, Richard Horton, called Sidibe’s response ‘surreal.’

“Nowhere does ( Sidibe) accept that he was responsibl­e for the toxic work environmen­t that his leadership created.

Nowhere does he acknowledg­e the grievous harms done to his colleagues at UNAIDS,” Horton wrote in an online commentary.

“Both the PCB and Antonio Guterres now have a duty to deliver on the recommenda­tions of the Expert Panel” and fire Sidibe, he added.

“The reputation of UNAIDS and the UN system depends on it.”

 ??  ?? Michel Sidibe
Michel Sidibe

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