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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World
Christina Okello with RFI

'Keeping things confidential or secret is dangerous':WHO chief responds to Trump

FILE PHOTO: Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during a news conference on the situation of the coronavirus (COVID-2019), in Geneva, Switzerland, February 28, 2020. REUTERS - Denis Balibouse

"Nothing was hidden from the US, from day one," insisted Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Monday as he sought to defuse criticism from Washington over the World Health Organisation's response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Tedros told reporters at a daily press briefing that US health officials had been working in the WHO’s Geneva headquarters from the beginning of the outbreak, which was a testament to the body's transparency.

"There is no secret in WHO because keeping things confidential or secret is dangerous. It’s a health issue.”

The health body claimed there were 15 staff from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention brought in specifically to work with the organisation on its Covid-19 response. “WHO is open. We don’t hide anything,” Tedros said.

US President Donald Trump has criticised the UN agency for downplaying the extent of the Covid-19 outbreak in China and failing to quickly declare a pandemic.

Funding gap

Critics like Trump have focused on the WHO's initial praise of China for its transparency on the virus, even though reports have since emerged suggesting that more people died of Covid-19, than the country's official tally.

Trump last week cut funding to the agency pending a formal investigation. American taxpayers contributed $400m (370 million euros) to WHO's budget in 2019, almost double the second-largest member-state contribution, and ten times more than China.

The US withdrawal will leave a 15 percent gap in WHO's $4.5 bn (4.1 bn euros) annual budget.

World leaders have been quick to criticise the move, with UN secretary general Antonio Guterres insisting "now is not the time" to cut funding at an acute phase of the pandemic.

Playing politics

Some experts claim that Trump is lashing out at the WHO to deflect attention away from his own administration’s handling of the coronavirus response.

The WHO chief has warned against politicising the health crisis, suggesting that divisions between people and political parties were "fueling" the pandemic.

Tedros, a microbiologist and once Ethiopia's health minister, has called for unity to fight a "dangerous enemy," which he says is slated to get worse.

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