Gaza Health says Israeli army blocks entry of UN aid convoy to Nasser Hospital

The Health Ministry in Gaza on Friday said the Israeli army is blocking the entry of an aid convoy by the World Health Organization (WHO) to Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip.

In a statement, the Gaza-based ministry said the WHO convoy is stopped 50 meters from the hospital, adding that it is escorted by top UN officials.

“The convoy consists of two trucks one loaded with fuel and the other loaded with water and food, and has been held for seven hours,” the statement said.

It added that the Israeli army dug in front and behind the convoy to prevent it from reaching the hospital.

The Israeli army is yet to comment on the Health Ministry statement.

The Health Ministry earlier on Friday said at least five patients died at the Nasser Hospital due to power outage after the Israeli army raided the facility.

The Israeli army on Thursday stormed the Nasser Hospital, forcing everyone inside to evacuate and flee for their lives. Yet, a small medical team stayed inside the hospital to take care of patients in critical condition, who were all held in one building of the hospital by the Israeli army amid lack of basic needs.

Since Jan. 22, Khan Younis has witnessed a massive Israeli ground invasion, forcing tens of thousands of the city’s residents to flee under heavy Israeli bombardment.

Israel has pounded the Gaza Strip since an Oct. 7 Hamas attack. The ensuing Israeli attack had killed at least 28,775, injured more than 68,552 others, and caused mass destruction and shortages of necessities.

Nearly 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed in the Hamas attack.

The Israeli war on Gaza has pushed 85% of the territory’s population into internal displacement amid acute shortages of food, clean water, and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.

Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice, which in an interim ruling in January ordered Tel Aviv to stop genocidal acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza. https://www.yenisafak.com/en/news/gaza-health-says-israeli-army-blocks-entry-of-un-aid-convoy-to-nasser-hospital-3677576

WHO helps evacuate 14 patients from Gaza’s besieged Nasser Hospital

The World Health Organization (WHO) helped evacuate 14 patients from Nasser Hospital in the city of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, which is under siege by Israeli forces, Gaza’s Health Ministry said Sunday.

The patients, including five on dialysis and three in intensive care, were transported to hospitals in the south as a result of the WHO’s efforts, the ministry said in a statement.

It said pressure was being maintained on Israel to evacuate all patients from the hospital, which it has converted into a military barracks after cutting off its electricity and preventing oxygen devices from operating.

Earlier, the ministry noted that 150 patients at the hospital had been left untreated and 70 health personnel were detained. It added that Israel did not allow the patients to be transferred to other hospitals.

The Health Ministry in Gaza had previously announced that the number of patients who had died in intensive care at Nasser Hospital due to its generator stopping and oxygen devices not working had risen to eight.

Israel has pounded the Gaza Strip since an Oct. 7 attack by the Palestinian group Hamas. The ensuing Israeli attacks have killed nearly 29,000 and caused mass destruction and shortages of necessities, while less than 1,200 Israelis are believed to have been killed in the Hamas attack.

The Israeli war on Gaza has pushed 85% of the territory’s population into internal displacement amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine, while 60% of the enclave’s infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN.

Israel is accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice. An interim ruling in January ordered Tel Aviv to stop genocidal acts and take measures to guarantee that humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza. https://www.yenisafak.com/en/news/who-helps-evacuate-14-patients-from-gazas-besieged-nasser-hospital-3677668

UAE, World Health Organization deliver air lift of critical medical supplies to Sudan

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the World Health Organization have delivered 30 tons of urgent medical supplies to Sudan.

A plane carrying supplies for injury treatment, emergency surgeries, and essential drugs arrived in Port Sudan Airport on Friday.

The shipment, valued at $444 000, is the first that WHO has been able to deliver by air to Sudan since the outbreak of the conflict.

In a statement, WHO said it had distributed supplies to heath facilities prior to the escalation of conflict. These were exhausted after a few days given the number of injured.

The dispatch of the aircraft comes as part of the UAE’s continuous relief efforts in support of the Sudanese people.

Dr Reem bint Ebrahim Hashimy, Minister of State for International Cooperation, said in a statement shared by WHO that the UAE “continues to work closely alongside the World Health Organization to ensure the successful deployment of the critical logistics operations to send urgent medical and food aid to help address the current crisis in Sudan.”

She added: “In parallel with calls for all sides of the current conflict to immediately cease hostilities and de-escalate a situation that is causing untold suffering for the Sudanese people, the UAE is steadfast in its commitment to providing aid and assistance to countries in times of need.”

“The UAE is particularly focused on providing for the most vulnerable groups affected by the situation in Sudan, especially the sick, children, the elderly, and women who are most at risk from the ongoing concerning conflict – and these relief flights will directly address the most pressing gaps in medical and food provision.”

“The UAE’s deeply held humanitarian values have meant that it has ensured it has continued to communicate to the world its robust and unrelenting dedication to strengthening peace, security and stability, not just regionally, but also worldwide, whilst alongside its partners and the international community, the country continues to assist the Sudanese people in times of crisis.”

The health supplies include enough trauma, emergency surgical supplies, and essential medicines to immediately reach 165 000 people who are in desperate need of humanitarian aid, said the WHO. Health facilities across the country report they have run out of basic health supplies and that national medical stores are no longer accessible due to the security situation.

Among other support, WHO is deploying two emergency logisticians travelling with the cargo to ensure that these supplies are immediately distributed to 13 major health facilities to support healthcare workers and extend care to those in need.

WHO has another 30 metric tons of supplies for malaria and noncommunicable diseases like diabetes and hypertension, conditions that can become deadly if left untreated. These and about 23 000 blood bags are being readied within the WHO global logistics hub in the International Humanitarian City, and WHO is currently exploring all possibilities for delivering these supplies to Sudan as quickly as possible in collaboration with the Sudanese Ministry of Health.

For his part, Dr Ahmed al-Mandhari, WHO Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, said, “The World Health Organization continues to coordinate with the Sudanese health authorities to deliver essential health supplies through all available pathways.”

“Due to the conflict, hospitals, pharmacies and primary health care facilities have stocked out of essential, life-saving medicines. The arrival of an additional 30 metric tons of trauma and emergency surgery supplies as well as essential medicines will enable WHO to support 13 major health facilities and re-establish health care services for those in need.”

The medical aid provided by the World Health Organization through the UAE accounted for approximately 55 percent of the total medical supplies provided to Sudan from abroad in 2022, reflecting the UAE’s position as a major hub for international humanitarian assistance.

On Saturday, Saudi Arabia and the US confirmed direct talks between the warring Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces is to take place in Jeddah to deescalate the fighting between the rival security forces which erupted on April 15. https://english.alarabiya.net/News/gulf/2023/05/06/UAE-World-Health-Organization-deliver-air-lift-of-critical-medical-supplies-to-Sudan

WHO Experts Weigh Whether World Ready to End COVID Emergency

A panel of global health experts will meet Thursday to decide if COVID-19 is still an emergency under the World Health Organization’s rules, a status that helps maintain international focus on the pandemic.

The WHO first gave COVID its highest level of alert on Jan. 30, 2020, and the panel has continued to apply the label ever since, at meetings held every three months.

However, several countries have recently begun lifting their domestic states of emergency, such as the United States.

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said he hopes to end the international emergency this year.

There is no consensus yet on which way the panel may rule, advisers to the WHO and external experts told Reuters.

“It is possible that the emergency may end, but it is critical to communicate that COVID remains a complex public health challenge,” said professor Marion Koopmans, a Dutch virologist who is on the WHO panel. She declined to speculate further ahead of the discussions, which are confidential.

One source close to negotiations said lifting the “public health emergency of international concern,” or PHEIC, label could impact global funding or collaboration efforts. Another said that the unpredictability of the virus made it hard to call at this stage.

“We are not out of the pandemic, but we have reached a different stage,” said professor Salim Abdool Karim, a leading COVID expert who previously advised the South African government on its response.

Karim, who is not on the WHO panel, said if the emergency status is lifted, governments should still maintain testing, vaccination and treatment programs.

Others said it was time to move to living with COVID as an ongoing health threat, like HIV or tuberculosis.

“All emergencies must come to an end,” said Lawrence Gostin, a law professor at Georgetown University in the United States who follows the WHO.

“I expect WHO to end the public health emergency of international concern. If WHO does not end it… [this time], then certainly the next time the emergency committee meets.” https://www.voanews.com/a/who-experts-weigh-whether-world-ready-to-end-covid-emergency-/7078274.html

Gov. Newsom Announces California Won’t Do Business With Walgreens

California Governor Gavin Newsom announced on Monday that the state will no longer do business with the pharmacy chain Walgreens following their decision to no longer sell an abortion pill in 20 states after attorney generals from those states threatened legal action.

For the last several years, Walgreens got a little shaky in the Golden State. Waves of store closures in places like San Francisco due to crime were widely condemned due to many of the closures coming in places where it would otherwise be very hard for some people to get prescriptions and other necessities. But neither California nor the drug store chain did anything considered “extreme” to the other.

However, all that was soon to change following last years’ Supreme Court decision Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which officially reversed Roe v. Wade and sent states scrambling over where they set the law at with abortion. While California quickly declared it is  an abortion sanctuary state and passed laws furthering abortion rights in the state, other states added restrictions against abortion. This included going after the sale of abortion medication at pharmacies.

Last month, attorneys general from 20 states that were in favor of more restrictions sent a letter to Walgreens warning them of legal action if they would continue to sell abortion medication in their stores or by mail in their respective states. After some initial confusion, Walgreens agreed to not sell abortion pills in Florida, Texas, Ohio, Georgia, and the 16 other states threatening to challenge them.

While the matter seemed to be settled, with Walgreens establishing the decision on what to sell based on local and state laws, the situation only furthered the ire of Governor Newsom. In a tweet slamming the company, Newsom announced on Monday, “California won’t be doing business with Walgreens or any company that cowers to the extremists and puts women’s lives at risk. We’re done.”

Following confusion by many on what that exactly meant, Newsom’s office clarified later in the day, “California is reviewing all relationships between Walgreens and the state. We will not pursue business with companies that cave to right wing bullies pushing their extremist agenda or companies that put politics above the health of women and girls.”

In a return statement, Walgreens responded by saying that they would still be selling abortion medication where legal to do so once they are certified by the FDA.

“Walgreens said it plans to sell mifepristone in any jurisdiction where it is legally permissible to do so,” said the company on Monday. “Once we are certified by the FDA, we will dispense this medication consistent with federal and state laws.”

Confusion over what California not doing business with Walgreens means

However, Newsom left many wondering what the Governor had in mind with the state “being done” with the company and what it would mean for Walgreens in California going forward.

“Any state agreements between the state Government and Walgreens are probably going to be looked at right now, and any future business, like any contracts with them, are probably a no go at this point,” explained Roger Springer, a former executive with two companies that helped negotiate contracts with local and county governments, to the Globe on Monday. “For those of you thinking that he will order all Walgreens to order the state, relax, that cannot happen for dozens of reasons.”

“Same with, say, ordering state Medicare to not be accepted at Walgreens for, say, medication. If anything like that was declared, you’d have judges blocking it within 24 hours, as well as it being political suicide. But what will be reviewed are contracts and business dealings with Walgreens itself. Those are in danger, and can probably easily go to CVS.”

“And what people aren’t looking at is the effect on the company and Californians. Many in the state might stop shopping there out of solidarity with the Governor. A lot of stores here are already not eaxactly on the best ground, so many could be at risk. Likewise, Walgreens may decide it’s not worth keeping some under-performing stores open here and pull out, with Newsom’s announcement and it’s effects being the straw that broke the camel’s back.”

“But that’s speculation. Right now, all we know is that Newsom is now looking for ways to have the state stop doing business with Walgreens over the abortion pills. We’ll see exactly what that means and what Walgreens will do to prevent that from happening. Honestly, Walgreens was put between a rock and a hard place. And if other states join California, Walgreens may need to make a big decision on their business practices nationwide.”

More details on what the Governor said are expected soon. https://californiaglobe.com/articles/gov-newsom-announces-california-wont-do-business-with-walgreens/

WHO launches $84.5m appeal for ‘unprecedented’ quake disaster

The World Health Organisation appealed on Friday for $84.5 million to respond to health needs after the earthquakes in Turkey and the Syria.

“The flash appeal outlines the health situation in the two countries following this humanitarian disaster, the main threats to health, the WHO response since the earthquakes hit and priorities for addressing the health impacts in both countries,” the UN agency said in a statement.

The WHO estimates about 26 million survivors are at risk across the disaster area, of whom about five million are considered vulnerable, with 1.4 million of them children.

As it launched the flash appeal for $84.5 million, the WHO warned the tragedy was only going to get worse.

“Casualties and injuries are expected to increase. Emergency medical services are overwhelmed with trauma patients,” the WHO said.

“Essential health services have been severely disrupted, thereby increasing the risk of Covid-19, other respiratory infections, cholera and other waterborne diseases, measles and chronic/non-communicable diseases.

“Equally, there is a huge, immediate and increasing need for mental health and psychosocial support services, as well as continued access to sexual, reproductive and maternal health care, antenatal care, child health and assistance to people with disabilities.

“The health consequences of this disaster are unprecedented in both Turkey and whole of Syria, and will last well beyond the initial phase of the emergency.”

The WHO’s immediate response will be split into eight priorities:

  • Ensuring access for the most vulnerable and affected populations
  • Immediate trauma care for injured patients and post-trauma rehabilitative care
  • Provision of essential medicines, emergency kits and supplies to fill urgent gaps
  • Prevention and control of disease outbreaks
  • Access to mental health and psychosocial support
  • Co-ordination of the international health response
  • Ensuring access to essential health services, particularly for women, children, the elderly and those living with non-communicable diseases

A 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck the region in the early hours of February 6, with its epicentre located in the Pazarcik district, Kahramanmaras province, in Turkey. There have been more than 1,200 aftershocks

The earthquakes have hit an area of about 400 square kilometres, including the large Turkish industrial cities of Gaziantep and Adana as well as surrounding cities, where about 15 million people live, plus an extra two million Syrian refugees.

Earthquakes also shattered several northern regions of Syria, including Aleppo, Hama, Lattakia, Tartous and Idlib.

Part of the problem is the hospitals that many people in affected areas rely on have been damaged.

The WHO said 15 hospitals in Turkey had sustained partial or heavy damage, while in Syria, 48 health facilities in the north-west were damaged. https://www.thenationalnews.com/mena/2023/02/17/who-launches-845m-appeal-for-unprecedented-quake-disaster/

Is this China’s full covid data? Why the WHO is pushing for more.

The World Health Organization is ramping up pressure on China to share key data on its latest coronavirus outbreak, using public statements and behind-the-scenes meetings to push Beijing as it tries to map the largest surge of the pandemic — even if it risks the government’s wrath.

It is a stark contrast to the WHO’s approach in early 2020, when its leader, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, praised China’s “transparency” on the new virus even as reports suggested Beijing had deliberately undercounted cases and silenced whistleblowers.

But the new approach might be paying off. On Saturday, China’s National Health Commission announced a significant revision of its data, raising the death toll in hospitals since severe coronavirus restrictions were lifted in December from 37 to nearly 60,000.

At the same time, Ma Xiaowei, director of China’s National Health Commission, shared much of the same data with Tedros, according to a WHO readout of a call between them.

WHO officials are unsure why China released the data now — and in interviews were hesitant to take responsibility. The numbers appear to show an outbreak similar to the waves of omicron that washed over other countries a year ago. It also suggests the new wave of infections had peaked — possibly reassuring news before the Lunar New Year, a period of intense holiday travel.

But there are also significant gaps, including in detailed regional data and information over time. It also lacks the detailed genome sequencing that WHO and others have requested to track any new variants.

“It’s really sad to see the number of hospital-related deaths of 60,000 in the last month, but that should be considered the minimum,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on covid-19. The data, she noted, does not appear to include deaths outside of hospitals.

Still, it is more information than China has typically provided. Before Saturday, Beijing had released little data on the outbreak, which grew exponentially after the government lifted its “zero covid” policy on Dec. 7, ending mass testing, harsh lockdowns and lengthy quarantines.

The secrecy around the latest outbreak had heightened concern among global health officials and analysts that new variants could be spreading undetected.

Van Kerkhove said the release confirmed to the WHO one important thing: “It tells us that this data exists.”

China’s National Health Commission stopped reporting daily case counts in December. From Nov. 1 to Jan. 13, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported fewer than 50 deaths, a figure analysts said was implausibly low.

J. Stephen Morrison, director of the Global Health Policy Center at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, called that data “ludicrous” and said it undermined China’s reputation. “No one believes it,” he told The Washington Post. “What’s the point?”

For much of the past three years, Chinese authorities blocked international travel and imposed strict quarantines to stamp out the virus — and avoided the worst of the pandemic. But as this winter approached, more contagious offshoots of the omicron variant began to spread, despite the harsh restrictions, and rare protests against the restrictions prompted officials to reverse course, lifting almost all of them.

Soon, authorities in many major cities, including Beijing, were reporting fast-spreading outbreaks. Satellite imagery of crematoriums suggested China has suffered many more deaths than the government has acknowledged, The Post reported last week.

As reports drew an increasingly dire picture, the WHO increased pressure, publicly and privately. Tedros repeatedly called on the Chinese government to report the number of hospital admissions and other information. The WHO urged China to share data on disease severity, the number of patients in intensive care and genomic sequencing.

The WHO also held several private meetings with Chinese officials, in addition to their regular contact in Beijing, where the organization maintains an office.

The meetings have been professional, according to those involved, but the message is clear: Where is the data?

Van Kerhove said WHO and other officials know the quality of China’s health data, having seen it on visits in early 2020. “The scientific capacity in China is pretty incredible,” she said.

The WHO has no authority to compel China to release data — but it can keep asking.

One shortcoming in the data is the way that China counts its deaths, which WHO officials consider unusually restrictive. According to WHO emergencies head Mike Ryan, China registers deaths as coronavirus-related only if the cause is respiratory failure and a positive coronavirus test has been recorded.

The new data is more expansive — it breaks out 5,503 who died from respiratory failure caused by the virus and 54,435 who died with underlying diseases combined with covid-19 (54,435). Still, some analysts remain skeptical.

“The new official numbers are most likely not a reflection of the total number of covid-related deaths,” said Louise Blair, head of vaccines and epidemiology at Airfinity. The science-forecasting group that has said China’s omicron wave had likely caused over 413,000 deaths. “These numbers imply a much lower number of deaths per capita in China than all other major countries have experienced.”

Amid conspiracy and conflict, WHO’s Tedros plans for the next pandemic

Liu Pengyu, the spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said last week that China has followed the same standard for counting deaths since 2020. Liu said China had been sharing “been sharing information and data with the international community in an open and transparent manner” since covid-19 was first identified. including sequencing data for the virus.

“In the past month alone, we had five technical exchanges with” the WHO, Liu said.

WHO officials confirmed an uptick in meetings with China. Officials from China’s CDC this month attended a virtual meeting of the WHO’s Technical Advisory Group for Virus Evolution, or TAGVE, to present genomic data. Chinese officials also gave an update on the situation at a meeting of member states.

According to TAGVE, the China CDC data showed a predominance of omicron lineages BA.5.2 and BF.7 circulating. Both are already common around the world.

Elodie Ghedin, a Canadian virologist who was present at the meeting, said the discussion included an overview of how genomic surveillance is working in China. CDC officials there choose one hospital in a key city in each province to monitor, then extrapolate a broader view.

“They run it through the same analysis pipeline that everybody else in the world does,” Ghedin said. Sequencing has declined worldwide, so China’s approach isn’t unusual, but the scale of the surge there makes it worrying, she said.

“In China, I would have hoped there would have been a bit more surveillance,” she said. “It seems a little low, in my opinion.”

Meeting participants raised concerns that China was not sharing more of its genomic sequencing from the outbreak with GISAID, a global platform for coronavirus data. According to Ghedin, Chinese officials responded that they hoped to study the data first and then publish their own research.

“We’ve heard this argument for decades,” she said. “People are always going to get scooped.”

So far, the Chinese response to the WHO’s pressure has been relatively muted compared to previous episodes.

Chinese officials reacted with fury in 2021 when Tedros criticized the results of a joint WHO-China probe into the origins of covid-19 that dismissed the idea that the virus could be linked to a lab in Wuhan. Beijing censored Tedros on online platforms last year after he said its “zero covid” policy was unsustainable.

But at a news briefing earlier this month, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin called on the WHO to “look at China’s covid response scientifically and rationally and that its related statements will reflect objectivity and impartiality.”

In the meantime, Van Kerkhove said, work at the WHO’s office in Beijing’s diplomatic district continues. But staff there are dealing with another problem: their own outbreak.

“Many of them have been sick,” Van Kerkhove said. “You know, like most people across the country.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/01/16/china-who-covid-data/

AP: WHO knew of past sex misconduct claim against doctor

When a doctor tweeted that she was “sexually assaulted” by a World Health Organization staffer at a Berlin conference in October, the U.N. agency’s director-general assured her that WHO had “zero tolerance” for misconduct.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was “horrified” by the accusations of groping and unwelcome sexual advances and offered his personal assistance. WHO suspended the staffer and opened an investigation.

But internal documents obtained by The Associated Press show the same WHO staffer, Fijian physician Temo Waqanivalu, was previously accused of similar sexual misconduct in 2018. 

A former WHO ombudsman who helped assess the previous allegation against Waqanivalu said the agency had missed a chance to root out bad behavior.

“I felt extremely angry and guilty that the dysfunctional (WHO) justice system has led to another assault that could have been prevented,” said the staffer, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity for fear of losing their job.

The previous allegation didn’t derail Waqanivalu’s career at WHO. As the new accusation surfaced, he was seeking to become WHO’s top official in the western Pacific with high-level support, documents show.

In the coming weeks, the agency’s highest governing body is meeting to set public health priorities and may discuss how and when the election for the region’s next director might occur.

Waqanivalu hung up when the AP contacted him for comment. 

He “categorically” denied that he had ever sexually assaulted anyone, including at the Berlin conference, according to correspondence between him and WHO investigators that the AP obtained. 

WHO said its report into the Berlin conference complaint “is in its final stage” and would soon be submitted to Tedros. 

On Wednesday, hours after this story was published, WHO told staffers it was forming a committee on “formal complaints of abusive conduct,” according to an internal email. The committee is to include 15 staffers, most of them designated by the U.N. agency’s director-general. 

The claims against Waqanivalu are the latest in a series of misconduct accusations at WHO. The agency’s last regional director in the western Pacific was put on leave in August, months after AP reported that staffers had accused him of abusive behavior that compromised the U.N. agency’s response to COVID-19. 

The earlier accusation against Waqanivalu came after a 2017 workshop in Japan, where a WHO employee said Waqanivalu had harassed her at a post-work dinner. 

“Under the table, (Waqanivalu) took off his shoes, lifted one of his legs and toe(s) between my legs,” the woman wrote in a 2018 report that was shared with senior WHO officials.

She left the restaurant and said Waqanivalu followed her. After she said goodbye, Waqanivalu “proceeded to give me a hug, grabbing my buttocks with both of his hands and trying to kiss my lips,” the woman said. The AP does not typically name people who say they have been sexually harassed unless they come forward publicly. 

After submitting her confidential report to WHO in July 2018, the case was “tossed around in (Geneva) for months,” one of the ombudsmen wrote to the woman in an email. 

The woman was later informed that Waqanivalu would be given an “informal warning” and that the case was considered closed. She wrote in an email to a WHO ombudsman that the agency’s ethics office told her that pressing for an investigation might not be her best option.

In October, Waqanivalu sat on a panel at the World Health Summit in Berlin as part of a high-level conference with attendees including WHO chief Tedros. 

In a hotel lobby one evening, numerous people were having drinks, including Waqanivalu and Dr. Rosie James, a young British-Canadian physician and former consultant for WHO. 

“We were talking about his work at WHO and he just started putting his hand on my bottom and keeping it there,” James told the AP.

James said Waqanivalu “firmly held my buttock in his hand multiple times (and) pressed his groin” into her. Before Waqanivalu left, she says he repeatedly asked for her hotel room.

Later that night, she tweeted about the encounter, prompting WHO chief Tedros to pledge to do “everything we can to help you.” 

James said WHO investigators interviewed her, but that Tedros never followed up. WHO offered to pay for any private therapy costs linked to the incident, James said. 

In Waqanivalu’s interview with WHO investigators, he said he greeted James “by tapping her on her left upper arm,” according to a record of the discussion obtained by AP. He acknowledged asking for her hotel room number, saying he made the request “to connect, if need be.”

Waqanivalu told investigators he believed people in the group, including James, “were under the influence of alcohol.” 

Last fall, Waqanivalu, who oversees a small team in non-communicable diseases at WHO’s headquarters, put himself forward as a candidate to be WHO’s next director for the western Pacific. 

“The experience and expertise I have gathered over the years … have given me the relevant credentials,” Waqanivalu wrote in a September letter to Fiji’s then-Prime Minister.

About a week after the Berlin conference, the chair of WHO’s top governing body in the region told Waqanivalu in a message seen by the AP that his name was mentioned “as a potential candidate” to be the next regional director. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/world-health-organization-sex-misconduct-claim-against-doctor-temo-waqanivalu/

WHO chief hopes COVID will no longer be emergency next year

World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Wednesday he is “hopeful” that the COVID-19 pandemic will no longer be considered a global emergency some time next year.

His comments at a briefing with media come as China dismantles its rigid “zero-COVID” policy and allows people to live with the virus, stirring concerns the world’s No.2 economy faces a surge in infections.

A WHO body meets every few months to decide whether the new coronavirus, which emerged three years ago in China’s Wuhan and has killed more than 6.6 million people, still represents a “public health emergency of international concern” (PHEIC).

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The designation is intended to trigger a coordinated international response and could unlock funding to collaborate on sharing vaccines and treatments.

Reporting by Emma Farge in Geneva; Writing by Josephine Mason in London; Editing by Alison Williams.

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/who-chief-hopes-covid-will-no-longer-be-emergency-next-year-2022-12-14/