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WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

Italy investigates WHO official in row over Covid response

Prosecutors probing Italy's initial response to the coronavirus pandemic have sought information from the World Health Organization, the agency confirmed Wednesday, amid claims a top WHO official lied to them.

Italy investigates WHO official in row over Covid response
Bergamo, the northern Italian town at the epicentre of the first wave of coronavirus that swept Italy early last year. Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP

Italian media reports say prosecutors in Bergamo have placed under investigation top WHO official Ranieri Guerra for allegedly having given them false information.

Guerra, until recently one of 11 assistant director generals at the WHO, is currently a special advisor to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Prosecutors in the northern town of Bergamo, the epicentre of the first wave of coronavirus that swept Italy early last year, have opened an investigation into the potential mismanagement of the crisis.

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Guerra spoke to investigators in November after Francesco Zambon, the lead author of a hastily withdrawn WHO report on Italy’s early response to the crisis, said it had been pulled to avoid embarrassing the Rome government.

Zambon, who resigned from the WHO on March 31, told AFP on Wednesday that the WHO had a problem with standing up to political pressure.

He pointed to accusations that it has been reluctant to press China over the origins of the pandemic. 

“This little Italian story helps you understand the bigger Chinese story,” Zambon said.

Responding to claims he was now being investigated for lying, Guerra denied any wrongdoing.

“I told prosecutors everything I knew at the time, in complete good faith,” he told the AGI news agency, adding that he was ready to speak to them again.

Guerra did not respond to requests for comment from AFP.

Prosecutors from Bergamo visit Rome’s Palazzo Chigi as part of their investigation into the Italian government’s initial response to the coronavirus outbreak. Photo: Filippo MONTEFORTE/AFP.

In Geneva, a WHO spokesman said: “WHO is currently reviewing a request for international judiciary assistance from the Office of the Public Prosecutor in Bergamo.”

He declined to give further details, beyond repeating the WHO’s previous position that the report into Italy’s coronavirus response had been withdrawn because it “contained inaccuracies and inconsistencies”.

The spokesman noted that Guerra at the time had been on mission to support the Italian government. In this capacity he reported to senior WHO officials “the need for checking of data and making appropriate corrections in the report”.

The paper, drafted by a WHO office in Venice, was published on May 13th and withdrawn the following day.

One of its most damning findings is that Italy had an outdated pandemic preparedness plan, dating to 2006.

The document also characterised the initial response of Italian hospitals to the virus onslaught as “improvised, chaotic and creative”, making up for a lack of official directives. 

On Sunday, Italian current affairs programme “Non e l’Arena” showed a leaked Whatsapp chat in which Guerra seemingly bragged about blocking the report.

“In the end I went right up to Tedros and I had the document withdrawn,” he wrote to a senior health official in Rome, apparently referring to the WHO chief.

The WHO has denied Tedros was ever involved in the affair.

The Bergamo investigation is also looking at why authorities failed to quarantine the area earlier, and has questioned former premier Giuseppe Conte and several ministers.

Bergamo chief prosecutor Antonio Chiappani told AFP he would not comment on his team’s work.

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HEALTH

Covid-19 still causing 1,000 deaths a week in Europe, WHO warns

The World Health Organization's European office warned on Tuesday the risk of Covid-19 has not gone away, saying it was still responsible for nearly 1,000 deaths a week in the region. And the real figure may be much higher.

Covid-19 still causing 1,000 deaths a week in Europe, WHO warns

The global health body on May 5 announced that the Covid-19 pandemic was no longer deemed a “global health emergency.”

“Whilst it may not be a global public health emergency, however, Covid-19 has not gone away,” WHO Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge told reporters.

The WHO’s European region comprises 53 countries, including several in central Asia.

“Close to 1,000 new Covid-19 deaths continue to occur across the region every week, and this is an underestimate due to a drop in countries regularly reporting Covid-19 deaths to WHO,” Kluge added, and urged authorities to ensure vaccination coverage of at least 70 percent for vulnerable groups.

Kluge also said estimates showed that one in 30, or some 36 million people, in the region had experienced so called “long Covid” in the last three years, which “remains a complex condition we still know very little about.”

“Unless we develop comprehensive diagnostics and treatment for long Covid, we will never truly recover from the pandemic,” Kluge said, encouraging more research in the area which he called an under-recognised condition.

Most countries in Europe have dropped all Covid safety restrictions but some face mask rules remain in place in certain countries in places like hospitals.

Although Spain announced this week that face masks will no longer be required in certain healthcare settings, including hospitals and pharmacies, with a couple of exceptions.

Sweden will from July 1st remove some of its remaining Covid recommendations for the public, including advice to stay home and avoid close contact with others if you’re ill or have Covid symptoms.

The health body also urged vigilance in the face of a resurgence of mpox, having recorded 22 new cases across the region in May, and the health impact of heat waves.

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