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WHO chief says priority is to prevent sexual exploitation after horrifying abuse revelations during Ebola outbreak

  • ‘Things are changing [but] it is not enough. We’re just starting,’ organisation’s chief Tedros Ghebreyesus said, acknowledging a need to speed up investigation
  • WHO has been under intense pressure to make changes following horrifying revelations of widespread abuse by humanitarian workers during 2020 Ebola outbreak

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Ebola survivors in the Congo, where others were the victims of sexual abuse by WHO workers. Photo: Reuters

The WHO chief told member states Wednesday that he was fully committed to reforms needed to prevent sexual exploitation and abuse by staff, acknowledging more needed to be done.

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The World Health Organization has been under intense pressure to make far-reaching changes following revelations in 2020 of widespread sexual abuse by humanitarian workers in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“Things are changing,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told country representatives gathered for the UN health agency’s main annual assembly. Speaking a day after he was re-elected to a second five-year term, Tedros acknowledged that “it is not enough. We’re just starting.”

Tedros’s first term was marred by horrifying revelations of rape and other sexual abuse by humanitarian workers as the WHO and other organisations responded to the 2018-2020 Ebola outbreak in the DRC.

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First Ebola deaths since 2016 reported in Guinea, as Congo battles fresh outbreak

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An independent commission of inquiry found in a devastating report last year that 21 WHO employees were among humanitarians who committed abuses against dozens of people.

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