Geneva: The World Health Organization has appointed a new official to overcome the prevention of sexual exploitation and harassment, after revelation that staff allegedly trade work to make love during the spread to Congo to fight the Ebola outbreak, said the UN Agency on Friday.
The Gamhewage style, a 20-year veteran, will try to streamline and increase internal efforts to fight sexual violations.
This problem has special implications for the body whose job is to protect the health of the most vulnerable people in the world.
Who spokesman Marcia Poole confirmed the appointment of Gamhewage, who has years of expertise in health emergencies and has voiced its concerns about sexual exploitation and harassment.
The appointment was valid on Thursday, and he reported to whom the Director General of Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
“Dr.
Gamhewage will work with the Department of Accountability to strengthen and accelerate their work, but he will not have a role in disciplinary action,” Poole said in an email.
Western diplomats and non-government groups have expressed concern about the way of managing who responded to the news report that first appeared in October 2020 concerning sexual harassment involving humanitarian staff in Congo fighting the Ebola outbreak which erupted in 2018.
In May.
The investigation documents that senior management was told about the allegations of gender abuse involving at least two doctors on the epidemic.
Tedro was depicted in photos on the WHO website with one of the doctors accused of abuse and sexual violations and senior staff who received email complaints about alleged abuse.
The Head of WHO referred to the doctor in the speech he made to the WHO decision-making body committee.
Shortly after the initial news report arose about wider violations in the humanitarian sector in 2020, Tedro appointed an independent commission to investigate this problem.
It is expected to issue his findings in August.
He acknowledged earlier this year that the response of whom about allegations of sex harassment had been “slow,” and more than 50 countries had requested agencies to become more transparent about how these cases were handled.
Gamhewage, who has recently been the head of whom is the development and development of capacity, has been said about this problem.
In internal discussions about sex harassment, he said “the impunity we operate leads for this.” In the audio record obtained by the Associated Press from the WHO City Hall meeting in November, he canceled “culture that allowed women to be treated in this way not only with armed militants but also by our own colleagues.” It was a real reference for armed groups in the Northeast Congo who violently hampered the response and other assistance groups against the Ebola outbreak that began in 2018.
“I really want us to be brave enough to start the change before this investigation ends, starting with Our workplace and walking far to the field, “he said, offending investigations ordered by Tedro in October.
“Training will not solve this problem.”