Skip to main content

UN bodies including UNICEF, WHO probe DR Congo sex abuse reports

UN bodies including UNICEF, WHO probe DR Congo sex abuse reports

UN bodies including UNICEF, WHO probe DR Congo sex abuse reports

UNICEF on Wednesday became the third UN agency to launch an internal inquiry into sexual abuse of women in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), promising “serious consequences” for any culprits.

The children’s fund said in a statement it was “appalled that people who identify as UNICEF workers have reportedly committed abuse against vulnerable women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.”

It was not immediately clear how many UNICEF employees had been accused.

“There will be serious consequences for any staff who have been found to have sexually abused people,” it added.

Earlier Wednesday the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said it too was investigating allegations of sexual abuse and exploitation by one of its staff during the DRC’s Ebola crisis, while the World Health Organization made a similar announcement Tuesday.

Placing three of the UN’s weightiest agencies in the spotlight, the statements come after a year-long investigative report published Tuesday by the Thomson Reuters Foundation and The New Humanitarian.

It found that more than 50 women had accused Ebola aid workers from the WHO and leading non-governmental organisations of sexual exploitation, including propositioning them, forcing them to have sex in exchange for a job, or terminating contracts when they refused.

The alleged abuses took place during the 2018-2020 Ebola crisis.

– ‘Victims should come forward’ –

The similarities between the accounts given by women in the eastern city of Beni suggested the practices were widespread, the report said.

UNICEF said that it “encourage(s) all victims to come forward”, adding that it has “strengthened our efforts to prevent, and respond to, sexual exploitation and abuse” in the past two years and has now sent extra staff to DRC to investigate the latest allegations.

ALSO READ: 8 companies so far demonstrate e-voting machines to INEC — Okoye

“Such abuses by UN personnel and other humanitarian workers are an outrageous breach of trust with those we are mandated to support, often in very trying humanitarian circumstances,” the IOM said earlier Wednesday.

After a “serious allegation” against one particular IOM worker, the agency “is determined to investigate and eradicate these shocking abuses wherever and whenever they occur,” it added.

Around a billion dollars in aid, along with an army of external specialists, flooded into the DRC after the much-feared haemorrhagic fever Ebola surfaced in its volatile east in 2018.

That outbreak was declared over on June 25 this year after 2,287 lives were lost — the highest Ebola toll in the DRC’s history and the second highest in the world, after the 2013-16 epidemic in West Africa that killed 11,000 people.

– ‘Outrage’ within WHO –

On Tuesday, the WHO said its leadership and staff were “outraged” by reports of sexual abuse by people saying they were working for the UN health agency.

“The actions allegedly perpetrated by individuals identifying themselves as working for WHO are unacceptable and will be robustly investigated,” it said in a statement.

WHO pointed out that it had a “zero tolerance policy with regard to sexual exploitation and abuse.”

It added its director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus had initiated a thorough review into the allegations, which it did not elaborate on.

The DR Congo is currently battling a fresh Ebola outbreak in Equateur province, which has seen some 120 cases and 50 deaths since June.

The outbreak is DRC’s 11th, and its third in the past two years.

[AFP}

Vanguard News Nigeria.

The post UN bodies including UNICEF, WHO probe DR Congo sex abuse reports appeared first on Vanguard News.


by Rasheed Sobowale via Vanguard News https://ift.tt/3cKNhfC Wikipedia Our Friends From Virginia

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Washington in the Fifties

 The Washington that I knew in the fifties was not the Washington of Dickens, Mrs. Trollope, and Laurence Oliphant. When I knew the capital of our country, it was not "a howling wilderness of first book of Adam and Eve deserted streets running out into the country and ending nowhere, its population consisting chiefly of politicians and negroes";[1] nor were the streets overrun with pigs and infested with goats. I never saw these animals in the streets of Washington; but a story, told to illustrate the best way of disposing of the horns of a dilemma proves one goat at least to have had the freedom of the city. It seems that Henry Clay, overdue at the Senate Chamber, was once hurrying along Pennsylvania Avenue when he was attacked by a large goat. Mr. Clay seized his adversary by the horns. So far so good, but how about the next step? A crowd of sympathetic bootblacks and newsboys gathered 4 around offering advice. "Let go, Mr. Clay, and run like blazes," shouted one

Lai Mohammed condoles with Oyedepo over wife’s death

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed,  on Friday condoled with Dr Hezekiah Oyedepo over the death of his wife and General Manager of the National Theatre, Dr Stella Oyedepo. Continue reading Lai Mohammed condoles with Oyedepo over wife’s death at Vanguard News. by Nwafor Polycarp via Vanguard News http://bit.ly/2L5PlVs Wikipedia Our Friends From Virginia

All-new A-Class leads Mercedes-Benz sales growth in four months

MERCEDES-Benz delivered 181,936 cars in April (-5.5%) and a total of 742,809 in the first four months of the year (-5.6%). The ongoing sales success of the new A-Class resulted in worldwide growth for the compact cars in April (+6.0%). A contribution to this sales success came from the new A-Class Saloon, a further model complementing the compact-car entry into the world of premium saloon cars from Mercedes-Benz. Unit sales of SUVs were still dampened in April by the model changes. Continue reading All-new A-Class leads Mercedes-Benz sales growth in four months at Vanguard News. by Urowayino Warami via Vanguard News http://bit.ly/2XfBqOd Wikipedia Our Friends From Virginia