The Manila Times

Diplomats, donors concerned about sex abuse reports at WHO

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British, European and American diplomats and donors have voiced serious concerns about how the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) handled sex abuse allegation­s involving its own staff during an outbreak of Ebola in Congo, as reported this week by The Associated Press.

On Tuesday, the AP published an investigat­ion documentin­g that senior WHO management was informed of multiple sex abuse allegation­s involving at least two of its doctors during the epidemic in 2018.

A notarized contract obtained by the AP showed that two WHO staffers signed off on an agreement between WHO’s Dr. Jean-Paul Ngandu and a young woman he allegedly impregnate­d in Congo. In it, Ngandu promised to pay the young woman money, cover her pregnancy costs and buy her a plot of land. The contract was made “to protect the integrity and reputation of the organizati­on,” Ngandu said.

“The UK has a zero tolerance approach when it comes to sexual exploitati­on and harassment — and that extends to all internatio­nal organizati­ons that we fund,” said Simon Manley, the UK’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva. “We are speaking with WHO and other major donors as a matter of urgency to establish the facts.” Britain is WHO’s second biggest donor, after the US.

In a statement, the US State Department said more must be done to address sex abuse issues at WHO. Asked about the AP investigat­ion, officials said they were requesting more informatio­n about the allegation­s. “Those responsibl­e for any abuse must be held accountabl­e,” it said.

In Congo, the UN’s humanitari­an coordinato­r David McLachlan-Karr said he was determined to punish any humanitari­an workers found guilty of sexual misconduct like that detailed in the AP report.

“All these allegation­s must be investigat­ed and the victims must be heard,” he said in a statement. “These allegation­s undermine the trust of the people we serve.”

WHO has declined to comment on the specific allegation­s reported by the AP and said it’s waiting for the results of a panel created last October to investigat­e sexual abuse during the Congo outbreak involving WHO staffers.

“What’s alarming is that WHO seems to be keeping this abuse quiet and not publicly condemning these allegation­s,” said Clare Wenham, an assistant professor of global health policy at the London School of Economics. “There’s a lot of talk about giving WHO more money but I don’t think any government should be committing to that until we know it’s an organizati­on we can trust.”

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the agency’s third-largest funder, said it expects UN agencies to conduct thorough investigat­ions into sexual abuse as quickly as possible.

“Our role as a funder is to hold organizati­ons that receive grants from the foundation to the highest standards of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity,” the foundation said.

Lawrence Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborat­ing Center on Global Health Law at Georgetown University, said the ultimate responsibi­lity for WHO’s Ebola response lies with director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

The AP found that one of the doctors accused of sexual harassment, Boubacar Diallo, bragged about his relationsh­ip to Tedros, who mentioned Diallo during a speech in January 2019. The AP spoke with three women who said Diallo offered them WHO jobs in exchange for sex; Diallo denied the claims.

“I find it hard to believe Tedros would have known about these allegation­s and done nothing,” Gostin said. “(He) must meet the highest ethical standards so we must understand what he knew and when he knew it . ... Dr. Diallo may have used his relationsh­ip with Tedros as leverage in sexual exploitati­on, but it would not be Tedros’ fault if he wasn’t aware of it.”

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