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WHO chief walking a tightrope on Tigray

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WORLD Health Organizati­on (WHO) leader Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s is in the rare position of heading a UN agency’s response to a humanitari­an crisis in which his own family’s survival is at stake.

Tedros, 57, hails from Tigray, the besieged northern region of Ethiopia gripped by fighting for two years.

Last week’s ceasefire deal between Ethiopia’s government and Tigrayan rebels raised hopes that the brutal conflict in Africa’s second most populous country could be nearing its end.

Globally recognisab­le as the face of the internatio­nal Covid-19 response, Tedros frequently uses his platform to speak out on his homeland.

“Yes, this affects me personally,” the WHO chief, who was once a top figure in the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), told reporters on October 19. Most of my relatives are in the most affected areas, more than 90% of them.

“But my job is to draw the world’s attention to crises that threaten the health of people wherever they are.”

Since the Tigray conflict erupted two years ago, the region’s six million people have been virtually cut off from the outside world. With little aid trickling in, they face dire shortages of fuel, food and medicines, and lack basic services, including communicat­ions and electricit­y.

There is hope that last week’s deal could open the floodgates for aid, but UN agencies will need to tread carefully so as not to alienate the Ethiopian government.

Tedros has to walk a fine line,

knowing that in evoking the suffering in Tigray, he opens himself up to allegation­s of oversteppi­ng his brief. But he has been reluctant to hold back.

Last week, he branded the situation as “catastroph­ic” and “the worst humanitari­an crisis in the world”, blaming Ethiopian and Eritrean forces.

Addis Ababa has accused him of being partisan and abusing his office, and warned that his interventi­ons threaten the WHO’S integrity. And at the WHO’S executive board meeting in January, Ethiopian ambassador Zenebe Kebede Korcho accused Tedros of “using his office to advance his personal political interest at the expense of the interest of Ethiopia”.

Addis Ababa slammed Tedros’s re-election in May and called on the WHO to investigat­e him for “misconduct and violation of his profession­al and legal responsibi­lity”.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into Tigray on November 4, 2020, accusing the region’s ruling TPLF of attacking federal army camps.

The TPLF was the dominant force in the four-party Ethiopian People’s Revolution­ary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition which controlled Ethiopian politics from 1991 for the best part of three decades.

Tedros was on the TPLF’S ninemember executive committee, until he was appointed to the WHO in Geneva.

He led the Tigray Regional Health Bureau before becoming Ethiopia’s health minister from 2005 to 2012.

When prime minister Meles Zenawi died in 2012, Tedros was seen as a possible successor as head of the TPLF – and potentiall­y therefore of Ethiopia. But he instead became foreign minister and served until 2016, before starting as the WHO director-general in 2017.

Abiy came to power in 2018. When he dissolved the EPRDF and formed the Prosperity Party in 2019, the TPLF refused to go along. The Tigrayan rebellion leaders emerged from the TPLF’S ranks.

Tedros has said his motivation for his career in public health lies in his family’s suffering. He said on November 1 that the risk of “genocide” in Tigray is “real but can be averted if we act now”.

The ceasefire deal could provide that chance, and all eyes will be on Tedros to see if he can get the world to hear his plea. |

 ?? ?? TEDROS Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s
TEDROS Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s

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