Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Muhammad Ali's son says he was detained at airport because he's Muslim

Muhammad Ali's son, ex-wife detained at airport 03:51


By Leinz Vales, CNN-Tue February 28, 2017
(CNN)The son of legendary boxer Muhammad Ali said he was detained by immigration officials at Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport because he's a Muslim.
Muhammad Ali Jr., along with his mother, Khalilah Camacho-Ali were returning to Florida from Jamaica after speaking at a black history event. They were retrieving their bags at baggage claim, when an official pulled them aside.
"He asked me, 'what is your name?' " Ali Jr. told CNN's Don Lemon on "CNN Tonight." "Which I didn't think nothing of that."
    The 44-year-old American citizen, who was born in Philadelphia added that the official asked for the origins of his name.
    "He said, 'OK, now, what is your religion?' " Ali Jr. said. "And I said, 'Muslim, I'm a Muslim.' And I thought to myself, that's kind of odd. He asked about my religion, and I'm traveling back into the country from where I came from?"
    Ali Jr. said the immigration official questioned him in separate room from his mother, Camacho-Ali for nearly two hours.
    "They asked me, where was I born and what my religion was, where did I get the name from," Camacho-Ali said.
    According to Camacho-Ali, she was released after she showed the official a photo of herself with her then ex-husband, Muhammad Ali.
    "I figured, maybe if I show I'm really Muhammad Ali's ex-wife, they would believe me and make it less of a problem," she said.
    Chris Mancini, the attorney for the family claimed the incident stemmed from President Donald Trump's executive order calling for a temporary travel ban on foreign nationals entering the country from seven Muslim-majority countries in the Middle East and Africa.
    Critics accused the order of discriminating against Muslims, and it was rejected by a federal appeals court.
    "They're not being questioned together, they're being questioned by separate officers," Mancini said. " So, if you've got two separate officers working the same flight, and asking those same kind of questions, that's part of a pattern, that's part of a program. There's no question about it. That isn't random. That's deliberate."
    An ICE official said that Ali Jr. was detained so they could identify him and verify his passport. They declined to provide any additional details, but said that he was not detained because he is a Muslim or had an Arabic name.
    Ali Jr. refuted the ICE statement, saying, "they didn't ask me nothing about my passport. They asked me, what religion was I? That's nothing to do with the passport."
    "Do you believe there is a ban on Muslims?" Lemon asked, to which Ali Jr. replied, "Yes," and Camacho-Ali added, "I believe something's in place, whether they want to admit it or not."

    In discussing Attorney General Jeff Sessions's failure to disclose his contact with the Russian ambassador, March 2, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Congress "impeached a president for something so far less." (Reuters)

    “I remind you that this Congress impeached a president for something so far less, having nothing to do with his duties as president of the United States.”

    — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), news conference, March 2, 2017

     

    In calling for an investigation into the veracity of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s comments to Congress, Pelosi claimed Congress impeached former president Bill Clinton “for something far less” than what Sessions had done.

    Sessions spoke twice in 2016 with Russia’s ambassador to the United States, The Washington Post reported, but did not disclose this detail during his Senate confirmation hearing as attorney general, when asked about possible contacts between the Russian government and President Trump’s campaign. In a separate written questionnaire, Sessions denied being in contact with any part of the Russian government about the 2016 election.

    So is it really the case that former president Bill Clinton was impeached for “something so far less” than Sessions?

    The Facts

    Drew Hammill, Pelosi’s deputy chief of staff, said: “Clinton’s actions involved personal matters while Sessions’s actions involve matters of state.” Pelosi has a point: While the two cases involve statements made under oath, the subject matters are vastly different.

    Clinton gave misleading testimony in a private lawsuit filed by former Arkansas state employee Paula Jones, and his perjurious statements were about his affair with Monica Lewinsky, not the plaintiff.

    Sessions gave potentially misleading testimony in a public Senate hearing about Russian involvement in U.S. presidential elections — an issue much more germane to national security than Clinton’s sex life. But we don’t know yet whether Sessions perjured himself.
    Let’s review the two cases.

    The Starr report found 11 possible grounds for Clinton’s impeachment, all having to do with Clinton’s false statements under oath about his sexual activities with Lewinsky. Clinton was accused of repeatedly lying under oath to a grand jury, in his civil deposition, and even to his own lawyer, investigators found. 

    Clinton abused his constitutional authority by lying to the public and Congress throughout 1998, and tried to obstruct justice, investigators found.
    From the Starr report:
    President Clinton answered a series of questions about Ms. Lewinsky, including:
    Q: Did you have an extramarital sexual affair with Monica Lewinsky?
    WJC: No.
    Q: If she told someone that she had a sexual affair with you beginning in November of 1995, would that be a lie?
    WJC: It’s certainly not the truth. It would not be the truth.
    Q: I think I used the term “sexual affair.” And so the record is completely clear, have you ever had sexual relations with Monica Lewinsky, as that term is defined in Deposition Exhibit 1, as modified by the Court?
    Mr. Bennett: I object because I don’t know that he can remember —
    Judge Wright: Well, it’s real short. He can — I will permit the question and you may show the witness definition number one.
    WJC: I have never had sexual relations with Monica Lewinsky. I’ve never had an affair with her.
    President Clinton reiterated his denial under questioning by his own attorney:
    Q: In paragraph eight of [Ms. Lewinsky’s] affidavit, she says this, “I have never had a sexual relationship with the President, he did not propose that we have a sexual relationship, he did not offer me employment or other benefits in exchange for a sexual relationship, he did not deny me employment or other benefits for rejecting a sexual relationship.” Is that a true and accurate statement as far as you know it?
    WJC: That is absolutely true.
    “There is substantial and credible information that the President’s lies about his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky were abundant and calculating,” according to investigators. Lewinsky testified that she and Clinton engaged in sexual relations and there was a DNA sample to support her testimony.

    In December 1998, the House impeached Clinton, accusing Clinton of perjury and of obstruction of justice. Then, in February 1999, the Senate acquitted Clinton of both charges. Five Republicans and all 45 Democrats supported full acquittal.

    As a senator, Sessions voted to convict Clinton on both charges, and said at the time: “It is crucial to our system of justice that we demand the truth. I fear that an acquittal of this President will weaken the legal system by providing an option for those who consider being less than truthful in court.”
    Now, here’s what we know about Sessions and his statements to Congress so far.
    Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.): “CNN has just published a story, and I’m telling you this about a news story that has just been published, so I’m not expecting you to know whether or not it’s true or not, but CNN just published a story alleging that the intelligence community provided documents to the president-elect last week that included information that ‘Russian operatives claimed to have compromising personal and financial information about Mr. Trump.’ These documents also allegedly say ‘There was a continuing exchange of information during the campaign between Trump surrogates and intermediaries for the Russian government.’ Now again I am telling you this as it’s coming out so, ah, you know. But if it’s true it’s obviously extremely serious, and if there is any evidence that anyone affiliated with the Trump campaign communicated with the Russian government in the course of this campaign what will you do?”
    Sessions: “Senator Franken, I am not aware of any of those activities. I have been called a surrogate at a time or two in that campaign, and I did not have communications with the Russians, and I am unable to comment on it.”
    Sessions was not asked whether he, as a campaign surrogate, communicated with the Russian government. Franken asked what Sessions would do if the CNN report turned out to be true and there was “any evidence that anyone affiliated with the Trump campaign communicated with the Russian government.” Sessions says in general that he is not aware of such communications. Then he gives a caveat that he was called to be a surrogate, and did not have communications with Russia.

    In a written questionnaire, Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) asked Sessions: “Several of the President-elect’s nominees or senior advisers have Russian ties. Have you been in contact with anyone connected to any part of the Russian government about the 2016 election, either before or after election day?”
    Sessions responded: “No.”

    The Post found, however, that Sessions met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak on at least two occasions. Once was after an event on the sidelines of the Republican National Convention in July 2016, and the other was a private meeting with Kislyak.

    After the event at RNC, a small group of ambassadors (including Kislyak) approached Sessions, The Post reported: “Sessions then spoke individually to some of the ambassadors, including Kislyak, the official said. In the informal exchanges, the ambassadors expressed appreciation for his remarks and some of them invited him to events they were sponsoring, said the official, citing a former Sessions staffer who was at the event.”

    Sessions’s spokeswoman told The Post that Sessions did not consider his conversations relevant to the senators’ questions: “He was asked during the hearing about communications between Russia and the Trump campaign — not about meetings he took as a senator and a member of the Armed Services Committee.”

    His spokeswoman also characterized Sessions’s September conversation with Kislyak as one of more than 25 conversations with foreign ambassadors as a senior member of the Armed Services Committee. Officials also said Sessions did not remember in detail what he discussed with Kislyak in the private meeting.

    So did Sessions intentionally mislead senators by saying he, as a campaign surrogate, did not communicate with Russia? Or was he simply saying he was unaware of evidence to support CNN’s report? Why didn’t Sessions disclose to Franken or Leahy that he had spoken twice to the Russian ambassador during the campaign, in his capacity as a member of the Armed Services Committee? It remains unclear.

    “Clinton was acquitted by the Senate after a defense stating that he did not commit perjury as his statements involved inconsistencies and he couldn’t be liable for perjury; Sessions’s statements to the Senate Judiciary Committee could not be clearer,” Hammill said.

    The Pinocchio Test

    The details about Sessions’s interactions with Kislyak are still unfolding, and his explanations about his misleading answers to Franken and Leahy are murky. However, in the context of Franken’s question about members affiliated with the Trump campaign communicating with the Russian government, it is unclear whether Sessions was intentionally making a false statement.

    While the Sessions and Clinton cases both involve statements made under oath, the circumstances are vastly different. (Pelosi may be better off comparing Sessions’s case to that of Richard G. Kleindienst, former acting attorney general in 1972.) If one were to weigh Pelosi’s claim based on whether Sessions and Clinton lied under oath, it’s clear Clinton’s case is not “far less” than Sessions’s. But the content of Clinton’s lies (his sex life) was “far less” important than the content of Sessions’s statements (about potential foreign influence in U.S. elections). Pelosi’s staff indicated that she was making a distinction between the content of their statements.

    Still, it’s too early to jump to such conclusions and make such an extreme statement. Pelosi earns Two Pinocchios.

    Oil down more than 2 percent as Russian output cuts stall

    A pump jack stands idle in Dewitt County, Texas January 13, 2016.   REUTERS/Anna Driver

    By Devika Krishna Kumar | NEW YORK- Fri Mar 3, 2017

    Oil prices fell more than 2 percent on Thursday after Russian crude production remained unchanged in February, showing weak compliance with a global deal to curb supply to tighten the oversupplied market.

    Russia's February oil output was unchanged from January at 11.11 million barrels per day (bpd), energy ministry data showed, with cuts remaining at 100,000 bpd or just a third of the levels pledged by Moscow under the agreement with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

    Brent futures LCOc1 ended the session $1.28, or 2.3 percent, lower at $55.08 per barrel and U.S. crude CLc1 settled down $1.22, or 2.3 percent, at $52.61.

    A stronger dollar also weighed on green-back denominated oil, making it more expensive for buyers in other currencies. The dollar .DXY rose to seven week highs against a basket of currencies after hawkish comments by a Federal Reserve official encouraged investors to expect a near-term interest rate hike. [USD/]

    The oil markets extended losses from Wednesday when government data showed crude inventories in the United States, the world's biggest oil consumer, rose for an eighth straight week to a record 520.2 million barrels last week.

    Oil prices, however, have been unusually stable since producers agreed in November to reduce the oversupply that has weighed on prices for more than two years, with both Brent and U.S. crude locked in $5 ranges.

    "I think oil is paying attention to risk markets at this point and not necessarily trading on its own news flow," said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management.

    "The CFTC data will tell you that there's very high conviction that OPEC is complying ... the question is what's the offset from U.S. producers and how much compliance you get from non-OPEC producers"

    Hedge Fund and money managers' bullish wagers on U.S. crude oil 3067651MNET has soared to a record in the week to Feb. 21, data from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) showed last week.

    Separately from its deal with Russia, OPEC has boosted already strong compliance with the group's six-month deal that began in January to around 94 percent, after it cut output for a second month in February, a Reuters survey found. [OPEC/O]

    "While constructive, we continue to view Saudi Arabia's willingness to sacrifice market share beyond its commitment to OPEC as more of a temporary sprint than a more sustainable effort," Tim Evans, Citi Futures' energy futures specialist, said in a note.

    Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said it was too early to say if the deal to reduce oil production would be extended beyond the end of June. OPEC, Russia and others are due to agree on output policy in the next three months.

    "It is premature to talk of what we will discuss in April-May," Novak told Reuters in an interview.
    Novak forecast Brent crude would average between $55 and $60 a barrel this year, with Russia's flagship Urals crude oil blend probably trading $2-$3 a barrel below that.

    (Additional reporting by Christopher Johnson in London, Naveen Thukral in Singapore; Editing by Ruth Pitchford and Marguerita Choy)

    Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund Accuses Medvedev of Secret Massive Estate

    Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund Accuses Medvedev of Secret Massive Estate

    No automatic alt text available.BY EMILY TAMKIN-MARCH 2, 2017

    Alexei Navalny, the lawyer turned activist turned political prisoner turned presidential candidate, has a fund dedicated to exposing corruption in Russia. On Thursday, it published an exposition on one particularly well-known Russian: Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

    The investigation, published on Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund’s website, notes that, while some call the prime minister “Dimon” so as to characterize him as pathetic, “He’s not Dimon. He’s serious uncle corruption.”

    ACF alleges that, in addition to the summer home it exposed last year, Medvedev owns another mansion outside of Moscow worth 5 billion rubles ($85 million), a mountain residence in Russia’s Krasnodar region, and a fourth mansion in the Kursk region (described by ACF as Medvedev’s “ancestral home”). Additionally, ACF alleges that Medvedev owns plots of land in Krasnodar, a building in St. Petersburg, an Italian vineyard, and yachts.

    Most damningly, if ACF is to be believed, the estate is not in Medvedev’s name, but in that of various puppet charity foundations and firms, overseeing holdings that span a continent. “The corrupt officials usually try to hide their activities, but these people are acting almost in the open. Hundreds of people are engaged in servicing Medvedev and his properties. And they all see, know and understand, who owns these dachas protected by the state special services,” the report’s conclusion states. Medvedev, when he was president of Russia from 2008 to 2012, tried to present himself as a reformer, Russia’s answer to U.S. President Barack Obama. But this report paints a decidedly different picture.

    Second most damningly, the report includes this picture of Medvedev in brightly colored sneakers.

    Screen Shot 2015-08-10 at 11.44.56 AM
    Medvedev’s spokesperson dismissed the report as propaganda in Navalny’s presidential campaign, which is true, at least in one sense — Navalny branded Russian President Vladimir Putin’s United Russia as the party of crooks and thieves and has long said he is running for president to root out corruption.  
    Photo credit: ANTTI AIMO-KOIVISTO/AFP/Getty Images

    Guns assembled in the UK may be arming child soldiers, says report

    European charities say German weapons firms bypass domestic controls by using British subsidiaries, exploiting a lack of transparency over UK arms sales
    Children gather near Bambari in Central African Republic during a military training session held in May 2015. Photograph: Pacome Pabandji/AFP/Getty Images
     in Berlin, and Wednesday 1 March 2017
    Rifles and submachine guns assembled in the UK could be exported for use in conflicts involving child soldiers, according to a report by European children’s charities.
    The report accuses Heckler & Koch (H&K) – a German company that is among the world’s largest producers of small arms – of sidestepping obstacles to exports at home by using its subsidiary in the UK, where a “lack of transparency” has frustrated attempts to scrutinise arms deals.
    H&K and another major German firm, Sig Sauer, turn to UK and US operations when guidelines and political pressure in Germany are likely to block exports to conflict-affected countries, according to the report – entitled Small Arms in the Hands of Children (EnglishGerman pdf) – by the Berlin Information-centre for Transatlantic Security.
    The cases cited by the study include H&K’s attempts to export thousands of guns to Nepal in 2000-01. “When it became obvious that Germany would deny such an export deal due to public pressure because of the ongoing civil war, Heckler & Koch quickly applied for an export licence for 6,780 rifles in Great Britain, which was then granted,” said the report’s authors.
    “In the end, it remains unclear if and how many rifles were exported. But even if this deal didn’t manifest itself, it nevertheless illustrates how useful such foreign subsidiaries can be.”
    Weapons produced by H&K and Sig Sauer have reached Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Colombia and the Philippines, all of which have documented cases of child recruits. Germany is one of the world’s largest arms exporters.
    In the 1970s, Britain’s Ministry of Defence licensed the production and assembly of some H&K arms in the UK. After the sale of H&K to a German investor group, the report states that the German arms manufacturer retained its British subsidiary. It claims that the company still sends small arms and ammunition to conflict regions via Britain.
    Similarly, the report says factories in the US operated by H&K and Sig Sauer have proved useful for selling guns to countries such as Colombia.
    “The decades-long policy of issuing production licences with almost no strings attached and non-existent end-use controls ensured that large quantities of German-licensed arms produced abroad ended up in conflict regions and in the hands of child soldiers,” says the report.
    Green party MP Caroline Lucas, who described the research as “further evidence of Britain’s shameful record of pumping arms into war zones, said: “The findings of this report require immediate investigation, and any routes by which arms end up with child soldiers must be urgently shut down.”
    The Campaign Against Arms Trade said that a lack of transparency and accountability benefits arms companies, as well as “a mindset of a government that has always put arms exports ahead of human rights”. A spokesperson for the British organisation said: “The UK government always claims to have one of the most rigorous and robust arms export control systems in the world, but in reality it does everything it can to support companies like Heckler & Koch that arm some of the most repressive and unstable regimes in the world.”
    A spokesperson for Britain’s Department for International Trade said: “The government takes its arms export responsibilities very seriously and operates one of the most robust export control regimes in the world.
    “All export licence applications are assessed on a case-by-case basis against the consolidated EU and national arms export licensing criteria. Our export licensing system allows us to respond quickly to changing facts on the ground. We have suspended or revoked licences when the level of risk changes, and we constantly review local situations.”
    The charities behind the report said they hoped a focus on child soldiers would help to illuminate an under-reported consequence of the lack of control in the global arms trade.
    “When you bring [child soldiers] up … German MPs do then see that the arms trade and support to those countries is problematic,” said Ralf Willinger, of Terre des Hommes, one of the four organisations behind the report. “If you just say these are exports going to a war zone, or to Saudi Arabia, that doesn’t necessarily mean MPs find it problematic – but when it becomes clear that these are children with German guns, then it is something that they don’t want to happen.”
    The report showed that in 1969 and 2008, the German government allowed H&K to sell Saudi Arabia licences to manufacture its assault rifles. In May 2015, Berlin admitted that Saudi Arabia, a country that Germany, the UK and the US all see as a key ally, had supplied H&K rifles to militias fighting in Yemen. On Tuesday, the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said it had been able to verify that more than 1,400 children were recruited as part of the conflict, adding that the actual number was expected to be higher.
    German weapons exports typically come with “end user certificates”, which are meant to guarantee the buyer will not pass on the weapons to other parties. However, the report noted Germany has no legal instruments in place to sanction violations of those certificates.
    “That just isn’t happening,” said Willinger. “Every German fast food stand is monitored better than weapons exports are – because they have all kinds of controls, hygiene and so on. With weapons the policy is: we deliver it, hand over a piece of paper, and whether or not they abide by that, it doesn’t interest us.”
    The German government insists its export controls are among the tightest in the world, and were recently tightened further. A spokesman from the economy ministry pointed out that in 2015 it banned the sale of licences to “third countries” (those not in the EU or Nato). “Such licence approvals in particular made it difficult to control whether weapons ended up in children’s hands,” he said.
    He added that Germany – and the UK – is bound by an EU “common position” from 2008 that, theoretically, obliges member states not to approve deals if there is evidence children are being armed in the target country. The common position isn’t legally binding. But the report suggests arms manufacturers can bypass such obstacles by applying for export licences in different countries.
    H&K and Sig Sauer did not respond to requests for comment.

    Selling Higher Education Is Much Sleazier Than Selling Used Cars

    Confessions of a former college admissions official: “My job left me feeling sleazy at times.”

    Product pricing always comes with a little fudge room. Many refer to it as markup. This is just a given in the world of sales and retail. That wiggle room allows sales reps the ability to offer “one time deals,” which serve as an effective call-to-action when closing the deal.

    by Jay Stooksberry-
    ( March 1, 2017, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian)  In a previous life, I worked in sales. But not just your everyday, run-of-the-mill brand of sales: I worked in a sleazy industry that championed predatory lending practices and distorted the pricing of its lackluster product, which often sent my clients spiraling down a rabbit hole of debt. And to make matters worse, this entire enterprise was buoyed by your tax dollars, so—regardless of macroeconomic patterns—this dubious marketplace remains untouchable.
    Amid internal dysfunction, can WHO help Vietnam defeat Zika?


    AP_16274338229415-940x580
    In this June 26, 2013 file photo, a Bangkok Metropolitan Administration worker fogs a home with mosquito repellent in Bangkok. Source: AP

    By  | 

    The firestorm that was the Zika outbreak in Brazil has largely passed since last year, but the mosquito-borne virus remains a stubborn global health threat.

    Cases have been popping up in a number of Southeast Asian countries for years – Thailand has reported nine cases in the past five years – but health officials in Vietnam are worried they could soon be dealing with a Zika pandemic.

    By January, Ho Chi Minh City had over 200 cases on its hands.

    Even if the Vietnamese public health system had taken steps forward over the past few years, it is still ill-prepared to handle an outbreak. Vietnam’s structural healthcare issues make trying to handle any kind of potential pandemic a frightening prospect.

    The Vietnamese government spends 7.2 percent of its GDP on healthcare, surpassing its neighbours, but the country still has far too few doctors and hospital beds to meet the high (and growing) demand.
    And even though Communist Vietnam has traditionally seen healthcare as a basic pillar of its relationship with the public, lacking facilities and “maddeningly opaque bureaucracies” still come standard.


    Like in China, Vietnam’s move from a strictly Communist to a more commercialised healthcare system from the 1980s created a two-tiered system.

    The percentage of people insured might be rising and out-of-pocket costs are falling, but many poor Vietnamese remain uninsured and still have to choose between unbearable expenses or not seeking treatment at all.

    What makes the decision even harder for rural Vietnamese is that the doctors in their areas have flocked to the cities, even when urban hospitals are severely overcrowded.

    The ratio of health workers and hospital beds to people stands at 7-8 healthcare workers and 25 beds for every 10,000 Vietnamese. The global average, by comparison, is 15 healthcare workers and 30 beds per 10,000 people.

    image: https://cdn.asiancorrespondent.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/shutterstock_191358782-1024x621.jpg
    shutterstock_191358782-1024x621
    (File) A crowd of people await their turn at a public hospital in Saigon, Vietnam, in 2014. Source: xuanhuongho/Shutterstock

    The gap between the current healthcare capacity and what Vietnam would need to handle a crisis means the country, like many other developing nations, will have to rely on the World Health Organisation (WHO), which offers support to national health authorities as one of its primary missions — for help.

    Unfortunately, the organisation’s most recent attempts to combat crises do not inspire much confidence.

    In 2015, an expert panel brought together by the Harvard Global Health Institute and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine did not mince their words in condemning the WHO’s response to the Ebola crisis.

    The panel called the response an “egregious failure“ and pointed out fatal delays, such as realising in March 2014 the Ebola outbreak was out of control, but waiting until August to declare an emergency.
    Again, when the link between Zika and microcephaly became apparent in Brazil, public health experts called out the WHO for inexplicably “sitting back on Zika“.

    Compounding the WHO’s technical shortcomings is its dwindling funding.

    To support its cumbersome and costly setup, with a head office in Geneva and six semi-autonomous regional offices (Vietnam’s is in Manila), the WHO relies on the overwhelming support from voluntary contributions by countries that are increasingly frustrated with its performance.

    The largest of those countries is the United States, and the Trump administration has signalled its scepticism in funding the United Nations and other international organisations.

    The World Health Organization Needs the Funding to Do Its Job

    The WHO’s sub-agencies are not helping its cause either: a U.S. congressional committee led by Jason Chaffetz, one of the leading Republicans in the House of Representatives, is currently locking horns with the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

    Over the past several months, Chaffetz and other Congress members have investigated U.S. federal government funding to an agency under scrutiny after declaring things like coffee and red meat carcinogenic.

    The IARC’s less-than-transparent approach to dealing with partners and critics has not helped matters, but transparency is an issue for the WHO as a whole.

    Behind the scenes, major personnel and policy decisions still involve backroom deals and secret ballots. Even with changes to how it elects its top leadership, the WHO is, in many ways, still the product of bickering among its parts.

    Quite a few outside observers are questioning whether the organisation should have a future at all.
    Oxfam UK former chief executive Barbara Stocking, who chaired the expert panel reviewing the Ebola response, pointed out responding to outbreaks should be the organisation’s “absolute essence.” She asked: “If it doesn’t deal with health emergencies across the world, then what is it there for?”

    That’s a question Vietnamese health officials could be asking in the next few months, as the Zika virus continues to spread throughout the southern provinces.


    To fix its internal dysfunction and provide the critical support developing countries need to deal with health crises, the WHO needs fixing fast.

    Three candidates, who are vying to take over as director-general this summer, are promising to do just that.

    Ethiopia’s Tedros Adhanom has taken on funding challenges by saying the organisation needs to expand the donor base rather than “put all [its] eggs in one basket,” while Pakistan’s Sania Nishtar argues the WHO needs to “demonstrate value for money” and “become more result-orientated and more resilient.”
    UK’s David Nabarro says he understands the importance of making sure the “organisation is working for impact in the most effective, efficient and transparent way.”

    It is imperative whoever ends up winning follow through on their promises to reform the agency.
    Unless the WHO gets fixed, countries like Vietnam, which have limited resources to deal with health crises, would not be getting the strategic and material support they need.