Under-fire UNAIDS chief offers to resign in June
UNAIDS head Michel Sidibe's term is to expire in January 2020
GENEVA:
Scandal-plagued UNAIDS head Michel Sidibe offered Thursday to resign in June, following an expert report that said his "defective leadership" had plunged the agency into crisis.
The timeline for the departure, confirmed by the agency, amounted to a concession from a leader accused of fostering a work environment that has tolerated bullying, sexual harassment and a culture of fear among staff.
Agency spokesperson Sophie Barton-Knott confirmed Sidibe's proposal for an "orderly transition" in June in an email to AFP.
Sidibe's term had been due to expire in January 2020.
UNAIDS' oversight body, the British-led Programme Coordinating Board, met in Geneva this week to evaluate the scathing Independent Expert Panel report which also charged Sidibe with overseeing a "patriarchal" workplace and promoting a "cult of personality" centred on him as the all-powerful chief.
Calls mount to sack UNAIDS chief
Sweden, a major UNAIDS donor, joined a chorus of activists this week in calling for the ouster of Sidibe, a Malian national who has headed the agency for nine years.
"We have no confidence in him. He has to resign now," International Development Cooperation Minister Isabella Lovin told daily Svenska Dagbladet, in a report confirmed to AFP by the ministry on Wednesday.
New ARV drugs, early diagnosis key to beating AIDS epidemic: UNAIDS
The Code Blue pressure group, which has been at the forefront of exposing abuses at UNAIDS, said Thursday that the refusal to fire Sidibe amounted to a "failure of leadership" by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
"Mr Sidibe doesn't deserve to leave on his terms and on his timeline. A leader of any other major institution who was accused of the wrongdoing described in the Independent Expert Panel report would have been summarily fired," Code Blue's co-director Paula Donovan told AFP in an email.
"The culture of impunity remains intact. Zero tolerance (for sexual misconduct) is nothing more than an empty slogan," she added.
It was Sidibe who had pushed for the creation of the Independent Expert Panel, following the accusation that he and the agency mishandled sexual assault allegations against former deputy executive director Luiz Loures.
But the panel's findings include a stunning indictment of Sidibe's stewardship, describing UNAIDS as being mired in "a crisis which threatens its vital work".
The report also said that Sidibe "accepted no responsibility" for anything that had gone wrong under his watch and argued that the agency's leaders had to be replaced in order to "regain a culture of dignity and respect.
Scandal-plagued UNAIDS head Michel Sidibe offered Thursday to resign in June, following an expert report that said his "defective leadership" had plunged the agency into crisis.
The timeline for the departure, confirmed by the agency, amounted to a concession from a leader accused of fostering a work environment that has tolerated bullying, sexual harassment and a culture of fear among staff.
Agency spokesperson Sophie Barton-Knott confirmed Sidibe's proposal for an "orderly transition" in June in an email to AFP.
Sidibe's term had been due to expire in January 2020.
UNAIDS' oversight body, the British-led Programme Coordinating Board, met in Geneva this week to evaluate the scathing Independent Expert Panel report which also charged Sidibe with overseeing a "patriarchal" workplace and promoting a "cult of personality" centred on him as the all-powerful chief.
Calls mount to sack UNAIDS chief
Sweden, a major UNAIDS donor, joined a chorus of activists this week in calling for the ouster of Sidibe, a Malian national who has headed the agency for nine years.
"We have no confidence in him. He has to resign now," International Development Cooperation Minister Isabella Lovin told daily Svenska Dagbladet, in a report confirmed to AFP by the ministry on Wednesday.
New ARV drugs, early diagnosis key to beating AIDS epidemic: UNAIDS
The Code Blue pressure group, which has been at the forefront of exposing abuses at UNAIDS, said Thursday that the refusal to fire Sidibe amounted to a "failure of leadership" by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
"Mr Sidibe doesn't deserve to leave on his terms and on his timeline. A leader of any other major institution who was accused of the wrongdoing described in the Independent Expert Panel report would have been summarily fired," Code Blue's co-director Paula Donovan told AFP in an email.
"The culture of impunity remains intact. Zero tolerance (for sexual misconduct) is nothing more than an empty slogan," she added.
It was Sidibe who had pushed for the creation of the Independent Expert Panel, following the accusation that he and the agency mishandled sexual assault allegations against former deputy executive director Luiz Loures.
But the panel's findings include a stunning indictment of Sidibe's stewardship, describing UNAIDS as being mired in "a crisis which threatens its vital work".
The report also said that Sidibe "accepted no responsibility" for anything that had gone wrong under his watch and argued that the agency's leaders had to be replaced in order to "regain a culture of dignity and respect.