WHO fires director in Asia accused of racist misconduct
The World Health Organization has fired its top official in the Western Pacific
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Your support makes all the difference.The World Health Organization has fired its top official in the Western Pacific after the Associated Press reported last year that dozens of staff members accused him of racist, abusive and unethical behavior that may have compromised the U.N. health agencyās response to the coronavirus pandemic.
In an email sent to employees on Wednesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Dr. Takeshi Kasai's appointment had been āterminatedā after an internal investigation found āfindings of misconduct.ā
Tedros did not refer to Kasai by name, referencing only his title as regional director in the Western Pacific. It is the first time in WHOās history that a regional director has been dismissed.
āThis has been an unprecedented and challenging journey for all of us,ā Tedros wrote. He said that the process of electing a new regional director for the Western Pacific would begin next month.
The Japanese government, which supported Kasaiās nomination for the role, declined to comment.
A summary of an internal WHO investigation presented at a meeting of the agencyās executive board this week in Geneva found Kasai regularly harassed workers in Asia, including engaging in āaggressive communication, public humiliation, (and) making racial comments.ā
Senior WHO directors told the organizationās top governing body that Kasai had created a ātoxic atmosphere,ā that staff members were afraid of retaliation if they spoke out against him and that there was a ālack of trustā in WHO.
The officials also found Kasai manipulated at least one performance evaluation of a subordinate, according to confidential materials obtained by the AP.
Kasaiās removal follows an AP investigation published in January 2022 that revealed more than 30 unidentified WHO staffers sent a written complaint about the director to senior WHO leaders and members of the organizationās executive board.
Documents and recordings showed Kasai made racist remarks to his staff and blamed the rise of COVID-19 in some Pacific countries on their ālack of capacity due to their inferior culture, race and socioeconomic level.ā
Several WHO staffers working under Kasai said he improperly shared sensitive COVID vaccine information to help Japan, his home country, score political points with targeted donations. Kasai is a Japanese doctor who worked in his countryās public health system before moving to WHO, where he has been for more than 15 years.
Days after the AP report, WHO chief Tedros announced that an internal probe into Kasai had begun. Tedros informed staff in an August email that Kasai was āon leaveā and another senior official was dispatched to replace him temporarily.
The termination stands in stark contrast to WHOās reluctance to punish other perpetrators of abusive and sometimes illegal behavior, including sexual abuse and exploitation during the 2018-2020 Ebola epidemic in Congo.
More than 80 outbreak responders working primarily under WHOās direction sexually abused or exploited vulnerable women; an AP investigation found senior WHO management was informed of multiple exploitation claims in 2019 but refused to act and even promoted one of the managers involved.
A recent internal U.N. report found the agencyās response to one case of alleged exploitation did not violate the rules because of a loophole in how WHO defines victims, a finding independent experts described as āan absurdity.ā
No senior WHO officials linked to the sexual abuse in Congo have been fired despite Tedros' insistence the agency has āzero toleranceā for misconduct.
āWhat we need now is consistency in how WHO applies the rules on abuse,ā said Sophie Harman, a professor of international politics at Queen Mary University of London. āThe survivors of sexual abuse and exploitation from (Congo) are still looking for justice; the WHO has to show them that they matter.ā
Javier Guzman, of the Center for Global Development, said a robust internal justice system at WHO was still lacking.
āMaking decisions on high level cases such as the one on Dr Kasai is not enough,ā Guzman said. āWHO and Dr. Tedros should do better to guarantee that the zero-tolerance policy is real.ā