Saturday, 20 April, 2024
HomeNews UpdateEthiopia pulls support for Ghebreyesus for second WHO term

Ethiopia pulls support for Ghebreyesus for second WHO term

Ethiopia’s government has said it will not support the re-election of Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus for his second term as DG of the World Health Organization (WHO), as political differences in the country play out on the world stage.

The country’s national newspaper, The Nation, reports that in a letter to the WHO executive board, Ethiopia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Ghebreyesus, also a former foreign minister, threatened the organisational integrity of the WHO because he had taken sides with a proscribed group in his native country.

“He has not lived up to the integrity and professional expectations required from his office and position,” said the letter sent to the board. “He has been interfering with the internal affairs of Ethiopia, including Ethiopia’s relations with the state of Eritrea … (and) continues as an active member and supporter of the TPLF (Tigray People's Liberation Front) that is proscribed as a terrorist group by the Ethiopian parliament.”

Ethiopia said it wants the board to investigate his conduct, and that he had violated his “professional and legal responsibility”. The letter was sent before a crucial 150th session of the board when it will “screen” the candidacy of Ghebreyesus for his second term. The board is due to meet for its annual meeting on 24-29 January to agree on the agenda for the World Health Assembly as well as vet candidates for the upcoming elections for director-general, due in May, during the 75th World Health Assembly.

Ghebreyesus denied siding with the TPLF, and claimed his own family had been hurt in the conflict.

 

The Nation – Ethiopia pulls WHO boss Tedros’ nomination for ‘supporting’ TPLF (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

WHO moves to address sexual abuse scandal with policy revamp

 

Anti-vaping advice by World Health Organisation ‘risks lives of millions’

 

WHO criticised over not declaring public health emergency in DRC

 

Africans living longer but spend those extra years in poor health

 

 

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.