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Mugabe named as goodwill ambassador by WHO | Mugabe named as goodwill ambassador by WHO |
(about 11 hours later) | |
The World Health Organization (WHO) has appointed President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe as a "goodwill ambassador" to help tackle non-communicable diseases. | The World Health Organization (WHO) has appointed President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe as a "goodwill ambassador" to help tackle non-communicable diseases. |
New WHO head Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus praised Zimbabwe for its commitment to public health. | New WHO head Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus praised Zimbabwe for its commitment to public health. |
But critics say Zimbabwe's health care system has collapsed, with the president and many of his senior ministers going abroad for treatment. | |
They say that staff are often unpaid and medicines are in short supply. | |
Dr Tedros, who is Ethiopian, is the first African to lead the WHO and replaced Margaret Chan, who stepped down from her 10-year post in June. | |
He was elected with a mandate to tackle perceived politicisation in the organisation. | He was elected with a mandate to tackle perceived politicisation in the organisation. |
'Mismanagement of the economy' | |
The WHO head praised Zimbabwe as "a country that places universal health coverage and health promotion at the centre of its policies to provide health care to all". | |
But US-based campaign group Human Rights Watch said it was an embarrassment to give the ambassador role to Mr Mugabe given his record on human rights. | |
"If you look at Zimbabwe, Mugabe's corruption, his utter mismanagement of the economy has devastated health services there," said executive director Kenneth Roth. | |
"Indeed, you know, Mugabe himself travels abroad for his health care. He's been to Singapore three times this year already. His senior officials go to South Africa for their health care. | |
"When you go to Zimbabwean hospitals, they lack the most basic necessities." | |
The idea of hailing Mr Mugabe "as any kind of example of positive contribution to health care is absolutely absurd", he added. | |
'Lack of resources' | |
President Mugabe heard about the award while attending a WHO conference on non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Montevideo. | |
He told delegates how his country had adopted several strategies to combat the challenges presented by NCDs, which the WHO says kill about 40 million people a year and include cancers, respiratory diseases and diabetes. | |
"Zimbabwe has developed a national NCD policy, a palliative care policy, and has engaged United Nations agencies working in the country, to assist in the development of a cervical cancer prevention and control strategy," Mr Mugabe was reported by the state-run Zimbabwe Herald newspaper as saying. | |
But the president admitted that Zimbabwe was similar to other developing countries in that it was "hamstrung by a lack of adequate resources for executing programmes aimed at reducing NCDs and other health conditions afflicting the people". | |
Zimbabwe's main MDC opposition party also strongly criticised the WHO move. | |
"The Zimbabwe health delivery system is in a shambolic state, it is an insult," spokesman Obert Gutu told AFP. | |
"Mugabe trashed our health delivery system. He and his family go outside of the country for treatment in Singapore after he allowed our public hospitals to collapse." | |
Controversial decision | Controversial decision |
Imogen Foulkes, BBC News, Geneva | Imogen Foulkes, BBC News, Geneva |
The appointment of 93-year-old Robert Mugabe will cause astonishment among many WHO member states and donors. | The appointment of 93-year-old Robert Mugabe will cause astonishment among many WHO member states and donors. |
A goodwill ambassador may be a largely symbolic role, but the symbolism of giving it to a man whose leadership of Zimbabwe has, critics say, coincided with a collapse of its health service, and major human rights abuses, will be very unpopular. | A goodwill ambassador may be a largely symbolic role, but the symbolism of giving it to a man whose leadership of Zimbabwe has, critics say, coincided with a collapse of its health service, and major human rights abuses, will be very unpopular. |