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All speakers acknowledged the significant progress made by WHO in tackling sexual misconduct and welcomed both the new Policy on Addressing Sexual Misconduct (PASM), launched in March 2023, and the three-year strategy to prevent and respond to sexual misconduct, launched in January this year.
Member States highlighted the need for conclusion of the cases relating to the response to the 10th Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2018-2019) including holding perpetrators to account and supporting victims and survivors comprehensively. They welcomed WHO’s transparency in publishing dashboards capturing both investigations and disciplinary actions taken.
Member States encouraged WHO to continue making progress and lead by example within the UN system. Member States stressed that preventing and responding to sexual misconduct is a shared responsibility and they will continue to support WHO in this effort.
Dr Gaya Gamhewage, Director, of Prevention of and Response to Sexual Misconduct (PRS), speaking on behalf of the Secretariat, cautioned that the Organization was only at the beginning of a long and hard journey and that many risks still existed, especially in health emergency response. She requested those Member States who were the most frequent implementing partners of WHO to collaborate more closely on PRS issues, and for donor Member States to dedicate funds for safeguarding against sexual misconduct in response operations.
WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus thanked Member States for their continued support and reiterated the four areas on which the WHO is focusing: changing the organizational structure, having safe and trusted reporting mechanisms in place, ensuring swift and credible investigations and setting deadlines for the end-to-end process (200 days), and following a victim and survivor-centered approach.
WHO has now to implement the recommendations made by the Programme Budget and Administration Committee and noted by the World Health Assembly:
- conclude processes related to allegations around the tenth Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as soon as possible and ensure that full accountability of actors is achieved;
- continue to request regular updates from the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services on its handling of outstanding investigations, as well as on whether any additional allegations of misconduct have been discovered while addressing the original cases referred;
- analyse disaggregated data once investigation results are received from the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services to identify additional gaps in WHO systems and workflows;
- once the majority of key actions and reforms have been implemented, but no later than May 2025, organize a comprehensive stock-taking exercise, conducted by an independent entity and overseen by the Independent Expert Oversight Advisory Committee and the Independent Oversight and Advisory Committee for the WHO Health Emergencies Programme, in order to evaluate whether those actions have led to the intended results for WHO’s three-year strategy, including its accountability systems and culture;
- finalize the accountability framework and ensure that it will be able to attribute accountability to individual staff and their functions; and
- continue its efforts around open communication and transparency.
You can watch the WHA session on the WHO website, Select Committee B on the tab on the right of the screen as below and scroll down to the episode highlighted: 25/05/20023; 14:30-17:30. The session for this specific topic starts at 33 minutes. The Secretariat response and the Director-General’s response start at the 1:21:52 time stamp.