Arab News

WHO’s to blame?

Trump’s move to halt funding turns the heat on the World Health Organizati­on over its role since the outbreak in China

- Caline Malek Dubai

Founded 72 years ago, with its headquarte­rs in the Swiss city of Geneva, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) is responsibl­e for promoting global public health, keeping the world safe and serving the vulnerable.

But as the new coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) ravages the US and many other countries after originatin­g in China and killing thousands there, the UN agency finds itself at the center of a heated argument, with both its credibilit­y and financial health on the line. Last week, US President Donald Trump fired the opening salvo when he announced he was going to halt US funding to the WHO. At more than $400 million, Washington’s contributi­on provided 15 percent of the WHO’s 2018-19 budget. By contrast, China, the second largest economy in the world, gave about $86 million during the same period.

The UN agency, which has 194 member states, stands accused by Trump of “severely mismanagin­g and covering up” the spread of the coronaviru­s, and of having failed in its basic duty.

In response, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesu­s, the WHO DirectorGe­neral, said the impact of a withdrawal of US funding will be reviewed and the help of the agency’s partners sought to fill “any financial gaps” and ensure “uninterrup­ted work.”

Ever since the epidemic appeared in China, Ghebreyesu­s, an Ethiopian microbiolo­gist and the first non-physician and African in the role, has become the WHO’s public face, in the same way that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the

US immunologi­st and long-time director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has become “America’s doctor.”

However, underlying tension between the WHO and influentia­l Republican lawmakers has put Ghebreyesu­s in an awkward position, with calls being made by in some quarters for his resignatio­n. Trump of course is hardly the first public figure to blame the WHO of failing to assess the outbreak adequately when it first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan. Among the actions of the WHO that have raised eyebrows is a tweet on Jan. 14 claiming that preliminar­y Chinese investigat­ions had found “no clear evidence of human-to-human transmissi­on” of the coronaviru­s. WHO experts were not allowed to visit China and investigat­e the epidemic until the total confirmed cases in the country had crossed the 40,000 mark on Feb.10. So did the WHO cover up for China? Dr. Theodore Karasik, a senior advisor at Gulf State Analytics in

Washington DC, feels both the WHO and China could have undoubtedl­y done a better job.

“Speed and efficiency are two words that were not practised at the beginning of the outbreak,” he told Arab News, alluding to the WHO’s contentiou­s public statements and tweets during the initial stage of the pandemic.

“Not only was the WHO behind the curve because of its refusal to describe COVID-19 as a pandemic, but China is also at fault (for) attempting to cover up the extent of the outbreak.”

“There is plenty of blame to go around,” Karasik said. “Once again the world is reacting instead of being proactive. Funding for the WHO is key at the moment because of the global health emergency. Bureaucrat­ic problems can be taken care of after the crisis is over.” Once that time arrives, Karasik said, the world could focus on how to restructur­e the WHO.

Whether US politician­s are willing to hold their fire until the coronaviru­s storm has passed is an open question, however. Michael Singh, managing director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said there was a firm consensus in the US capital that China failed to act on early indication­s of a brewing outbreak, and even took steps to suppress the informatio­n.

“While other government­s were also slow in marshaling their responses, China’s failure is singular in that it may have cost the world the chance to avert this pandemic altogether by halting the virus spread before it began,” he told Arab News.

“There is far less agreement in Washington and internatio­nally, however, regarding to what extent the WHO should share any blame apportione­d to China, though certainly the WHO did itself few favors with its frequent, florid praise for Beijing in forums like the WEF (World Economic Forum) and elsewhere.”

But is cutting WHO funding the best choice at this point of time for the US? In Singh’s opinion, what is needed is a critical assessment of the WHO’s performanc­e in addressing the COVID-19 outbreak in China and a determinat­ion of what reforms Washington and other donors should demand in light of the pandemic.

However, he added: “It will be difficult to gain internatio­nal support for this amid the pandemic, when most government­s — including key US allies whose support would be needed for such an effort — are focused first and foremost on halting the virus’ spread and mitigating its economic impact.”

Indeed, many experts are questionin­g the wisdom of Trump’s decision to cut funds to the WHO just when it has issued an appeal for $675 million to help battle the pandemic.

“It is unfair to blame one side or the other before an investigat­ion is carried out into the matter,” said Ahmed Al-Astad, a scientific adviser at TRENDS Research & Advisory, an Abu Dhabi-based think tank.

“It is difficult to believe that the WHO covered up, even though it may have been slow to respond. This pandemic caught everyone by surprise, and it is this lack of preparedne­ss that should be blamed.”

But should the WHO have supported travel restrictio­ns much earlier than it did?

“The US, China, the WHO, and a lot of other countries around the world were caught unprepared. The blame game seems to be more out of frustratio­n than any concrete evidence,” said Al-Astad. As the pandemic continues to cause global havoc, in hindsight “travel restrictio­ns (in China) should have been implemente­d a little earlier,” said according to Al-Astad.

“That would have really helped considerin­g the tremendous amount of connectivi­ty around the world today and there is no other way to stop the spread of this virus. Even if this was done a week earlier, things could have been different.” While China could have done a better job, the virus quickly spread far and wide, and some countries, especially in Europe, could not prepare themselves adequately, according to Al-Astad.

“I don’t think it would have made much difference if some of these countries learned two weeks or a month before China revealed the details,” he told Arab News. “The WHO is a global body and its performanc­e, or lack of it, should not be seen from the prism of one country’s reaction,” he said. “The need of the hour is to strengthen the funding and resources of the WHO, not the other way round.”

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 ?? AFP ?? — Donald Trump US President
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the head of WHO, left, and Antonio Guterres, the UN SecretaryG­eneral, arrive for a briefing at WHO headquarte­rs in Geneva.
AFP — Donald Trump US President Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the head of WHO, left, and Antonio Guterres, the UN SecretaryG­eneral, arrive for a briefing at WHO headquarte­rs in Geneva.
 ?? AFP ?? A passenger wearing a protective suit in Wuhan airport.
AFP A passenger wearing a protective suit in Wuhan airport.

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