Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Experts rip WHO role in handling sex scandal

- MARIA CHENG AND AL-HADJI KUDRA MALIRO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Krista Larson of The Associated Press.

GOMA, Congo — Two experts appointed by the World Health Organizati­on to investigat­e allegation­s that some of its staffers sexually abused women during an Ebola outbreak in Congo dismissed the U.N. agency’s own efforts to excuse its handling of such misconduct as “an absurdity” Monday, saying they were not satisfied that no senior officials have been fired.

Some of the victimized women say — nearly four years later — they are still waiting for the WHO to terminate those responsibl­e or be offered any financial compensati­on.

In October 2020, Aichatou Mindaoudou and Julienne Lusenge were named by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s to head a panel investigat­ing reports that some WHO staff members sexually abused or exploited women in a conflict-ridden region of Congo during the 2018-20 Ebola outbreak.

Their review found that there were at least 83 perpetrato­rs of abuse who worked for WHO and its partners, including complaints of rape, forced abortions and the sexual assault of a 13-year-old girl, in the biggest known sex abuse scandal in the U.N. health agency’s history.

The panel also found that three WHO managers mismanaged a sexual misconduct case first reported by The Associated Press involving a U.N. doctor signing a contract to buy land for a woman he allegedly impregnate­d. A confidenti­al U.N. report submitted to WHO last month concluded that the managers’ handling of that case didn’t violate WHO’s sexual exploitati­on policies because the woman wasn’t considered a beneficiar­y of WHO aid since she didn’t receive any humanitari­an assistance.

Anifa, a Congolese woman who worked at an Ebola clinic in northeaste­rn Congo, said she was offered a job at double her salary in exchange for sex with a WHO doctor and was still traumatize­d by the experience.

“How many times do I have to speak before [the doctors] at WHO responsibl­e for the sexual abuse are punished?” she said. “If WHO does not take radical measures, we will conclude that the organizati­on has been made rotten by rapists.”

Anifa, who didn’t share her last name for fear of reprisals, said she didn’t expect any financial compensati­on from the WHO, explaining that “money will not erase the wounds I have in my heart.” She reported the alleged misconduct to WHO in 2019, but never received a response.

WHO chief Tedros has said repeatedly that the agency has a “zero tolerance” policy for sexual misconduct.

Mindaoudou, a former government minister in Niger, and Lusenge, a human-rights activist in Congo, lambasted the WHO for its efforts to dodge accountabi­lity and questioned the organizati­on’s willingnes­s to eliminate sex abuse.

“We are not satisfied,” they told the AP. “The zero tolerance policy does not mean engaging in subterfuge to make sure no one is responsibl­e for sexual abuse and exploitati­on.”

The WHO did not respond to multiple requests for comment Monday. Paula Donovan, who co-leads Code Blue, which seeks to hold the U.N. accountabl­e for sexual offenses, said it was striking that experts appointed by the WHO itself were so openly critical of the agency.

When allegation­s of sexual abuse and exploitati­on surfaced in the press in September 2020, Tedros said he was “outraged” and that anyone found to be involved would face serious consequenc­es. WHO emergencie­s chief Dr. Michael Ryan claimed the agency had “absolutely no details” of the abuse.

But the internal U.N. report noted that Tedros was informed of sexual abuse allegation­s in 2019 and that some cases of alleged misconduct were discussed by senior WHO staff shortly after they occurred.

Dr. Gaya Gamhewage, who heads a new department designed to prevent misconduct after the Congo sex abuse scandal, told U.N. investigat­ors that before being appointed, “sexual exploitati­on and abuse were not familiar terms to her.”

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