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WHO Staff In Asia Blast Their Director For Racism

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Jan 28, 2022
  • 2 min read

Current and former staffers have accused the top director of the World Health Organization (WHO) in the Western Pacific of racist, unethical, and abusive behavior that has undermined the U.N. health agency’s efforts to curb the coronavirus pandemic, Maria Cheng reported for Associated Press (AP).


Photo Insert: Dr. Takeshi Kasai



The allegations were laid out in an internal complaint filed in October and again in an email last week, sent by unidentified “concerned WHO staff” to senior leadership and the executive board and obtained by the AP.


Two of the authors said more than 30 staffers were involved in writing it, and that it reflected the experiences of more than 50 people. Among the most damning claims is that Kasai made “racist and derogatory remarks to staff of certain nationalities.”



The internal complaint filed to WHO alleges that Kasai once aggressively questioned a Filipino staffer during a coronavirus meeting, saying: “How many people in the Pacific have you killed so far and how many more do you want to kill further?” The complaint said he then asked, “if she was incapable of delivering good presentations because she was Filipina.”


The internal complaint and the email describe a “toxic atmosphere” with “a culture of systemic bullying and public ridiculing” at WHO’s Western Pacific headquarters in Manila, led by Dr. Takeshi Kasai, director of a vast region that includes China and his home country of Japan.


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AP also has obtained recorded snippets of meetings where Kasai is heard making derogatory remarks about his staff based on nationality. Eleven former or current WHO staffers who worked for Kasai told the AP he frequently used racist language.


Staffers, who did not identify themselves to WHO “for fear of retaliation,” said in the email that Kasai’s authoritarian style has led to the departure of more than 55 key staff in the past year and a half, most of whom have not been replaced. This resulted in a lack of understanding and involvement with member countries that “significantly contributed” to a surge of cases in many countries in the region, they said.


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However, other WHO staffers pointed out that spikes in COVID cases were due to numerous reasons, including countries’ own resources and the timing of their national efforts.


The complaint and message also accused Kasai of improperly sharing potentially sensitive vaccine information with Japan, one of 37 countries in the region he leads. In an email to the AP, Kasai denied allegations of racism and unethical behavior. He said that after receiving the email last week, he immediately took steps to communicate with all his staff.





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