U.N. health agency names tyrant Mugabe 'goodwill ambassador'
Sickening: U.N. health agency names tyrant Mugabe 'goodwill ambassador'; rights activists outraged
GENEVA, October 19, 2017 – The
non-governmental human rights group UN Watch expressed
“grave disappointment” at the U.N. health body's
appointment of Zimbabwe's dictator as a goodwill ambassador
on health, even as his policies have devastated Zimbabwe's
once-prosperous economy, leaving a crumbling health system
while Mugabe obtains his own medical assistance outside the
country.
“The government of
Robert Mugabe has brutalized human rights activists, crushed
democracy dissidents, and turned the breadbasket of Africa
— and its health system — into a basket-case. The notion
that the U.N. should now spin this country as a great
supporter of health is, frankly, sickening,” said UN Watch
executive director Hillel Neuer.
“Amid reports of
ongoing human rights abuses, the tyrant of Zimbabwe is the
last person who should be legitimized by a U.N. position of
any kind,” said Neuer.
Over the past decade, UN Watch
has brought numerous Zimbabwean human rights activists to
testify on the sidelines of UN conferences.
Speaking on
October 18 in Uruguay, WHO director-general Dr Tedros
Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was "honored to announce that
President Mugabe has agreed to serve as a goodwill
ambassador." He praised Zimbabwe for "placi[ng] universal
health coverage and health promotion at the center of its
policies to provide health care to all."
Tedros in August
also thanked Mugabe for his "strong commitment to
health."
Rights activists are outraged. "Given Mugabe's
appalling human rights record, calling him a Goodwill
Ambassador for anything embarrasses WHO and Doctor Tedros,"
Iain Levine, program director at Human Rights Watch,
commented on Twitter.
"When Mugabe flies to Singapore for
special medical treatment, he leaves behind poorly funded
health services, which most of their citizens have to rely
on," said Neuer. “It's a disgraceful show of support —
and a terribly-timed award of false legitimacy — for a
brutal, corrupt and authoritarian regime.”
In Zimbabwe,
state-run hospitals and clinics often run out of basic
medicines like painkillers and antibiotics, according to
Zimbabwean health watchdog Citizens Health Watch. It says
that the public health care system "continues to deteriorate
at alarming levels" with lack of money being the main
problem.
"Zimbabwe's healthcare system, like many of its
public services, has collapsed under Mugabe's authoritarian
regime, with most hospitals out of stock of essential
medicines and supplies, and nurses and doctors regularly
left unpaid," reports AFP.
FM HAILS COUP FOR
ZIMBABWE"
Foreign Affairs
minister Walter Mzembi hailed the appointment as "a major
health diplomacy coup for Zimbabwe."
"New feather in
President’s cap," blared the headline of Zimbabwe's
Herald, one of many local newspaper to extol the U.N.
appointment.
"It’s outrageous that the UN is allowing
itself to be used like this as a propaganda tool,” said
Neuer, "The decision to honor Mugabe despite his long
history of human rights abuses brings discredit upon the
UN.”
“The good name of the world body is being used
to legitimize Mugabe’s massive abuses of civil liberties
which contravene U.N. human rights conventions. How can
someone who violates core U.N. principles be elevated as a
kind of example to the world?” Neuer asked.
He added:
“If this is the stance of the United Nations, then where
else can Zimbabweans turn to for human rights
protection?”
Web version: https://www.unwatch.org/u-n-health-agency-names-tyrant-mugabe-goodwill-ambassador-rights-activists-outraged/