Sexual assault
Washington and Brussels joined with
other Western capitals on Friday to call for “full commitment” from the World
Health Organization to reform, after a damning report detailed rape and sexual
abuse by its workers sent to fight Ebola in DR Congo.
“The governments of Australia, Canada,
the European Union and its member states, New Zealand, Norway, the United
Kingdom and the United States of America… expect full commitment from the WHO
to prevent and address such acts, including through fundamental reforms to the
WHO,” the governments said in a joint statement.
Calling it a “dark day for WHO”, the UN
body’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus had on Tuesday told victims he was
“sorry” and that it was “top priority that the perpetrators are not excused but
held to account”.
On Friday, the member state governments
said that “we will ensure that the WHO leadership’s commitments lead to
accountability, increased capability, action, and swift change”, calling for an
“immediate, thorough and detailed assessment” of what went wrong.
The report centred on accusations
against local and international personnel deployed in the Democratic Republic
of Congo to fight an Ebola outbreak from 2018 to 2020.
It cited “individual negligence that
may amount to professional misconduct”.
The authors also said they found “clear
structural failures and unpreparedness to manage the risks of incidents of
sexual exploitation and abuse” in the poor central African country.
Among the 83 suspects identified, 21
were employed by the WHO.
Four have had their contracts
terminated and are banned from future employment at the WHO, while two senior
staff have been placed on administrative leave.
The agency will also refer rape
allegations to the Congolese authorities and those of other concerned states,
Tedros said.
(AFP)
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