GENEVA: Ethiopia's Tedros Adhanom was elected Tuesday as the new head of the World Health Organization, diplomats said.
The former Ethiopian health minister
beat Britain's David Nabarro and Sania Nishtar of Pakistan in the race
to lead the UN's public health body, replacing outgoing chief Margaret
Chan of Hong Kong.
The result was confirmed in a statement by the WHO after three rounds of voting on Tuesday.
Tedros, a 52-year-old malaria
specialist, will take over on July 1, succeeding Margaret Chan, a Hong
Kong native whose decade-long tenure was marred by the agency´s fiercely
criticised response to the Ebola epidemic in west Africa.
In his final pitch to member-states
before ballots were cast, Tedros vowed to staff the WHO with "a
world-class workforce" while introducing strict accountability measures,
which critics say have been sorely lacking at the Geneva-based agency.
He listed delivering universal healthcare, especially to the world´s most impoverished, as his top priority.
Tedros said he refused "to accept that people should die because they are poor."
- Ebola scars -
The WHO is perhaps the most influential
United Nations agency, charged with emergency response and shaping
baseline policies for treatment of major health challenges.
The agency was broadly accused of
failing the major test that followed the December 2013 Ebola outbreak,
missing key warnings about the severity of an epidemic that
ultimately killed more than 11,000 people.
Health officials, including from
Washington, a key WHO donor, said the agency´s new leadership needed to
get emergency response right.
"We know that the next health emergency
is not a question of ´if´ but ´when´", US health secretary Tom Price
said in Geneva earlier Tuesday.
"When it happens the world will turn to
the WHO for guidance and for leadership. We need to be sure it is up to
the task," he told the Swiss Press Club.
Tedros vowed to lead "robust responses to the health crises to come".
- An African victory -
Tedros will be the first African to lead
the WHO and had unanimous backing from the African Union, which claimed
that the continent deserved a shot to lead the agency.
Nabarro, who had strong support from his
native Britain and touted his decades of experience within the UN
system, ultimately failed to persuade voters that the agency
needed an insider in its top job.
Nishtar, a former Pakistani health minister, won praise for a strong campaign but was always viewed a long shot.
Tuesday marked the first time that the WHO´s 194-member states got to choose the agency´s leader.
Previously the executive committee offered just one candidate for states to rubber stamp.
- ´Big changes´ needed -
The WHO has already initiated a range of
reforms since it faced crushing criticism over its response to the
Ebola crisis, but experts say the new chief still faces a huge task.
"We need WHO to be more effective than
it is today," the director of Harvard University´s Global Health
Institute, Ashish Jha, said at the Swiss Press Club event.
Mark Dybul, who heads the Global Fund To
Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, said that Chan had "laid the
foundations" for improvements but that "big, big changes need to be
made".
He underscored "massive" coordination problems between regional offices and the agency´s Geneva headquarters.
This was identified as a significant
issue in the Ebola crisis, when the African office in Brazzaville was
accused of not sounding the alarm.
-Impressive record -
Tedros earned a doctorate from the
University of Nottingham in Britain before being appointed Ethiopia´s
health minister in 2005.
He oversaw a drive to expand basic healthcare by building thousands of new clinics and boosting community-based health services.
"I am astonished when I think of the path my life has taken," he said before Tuesday´s result.
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