London
Thomson Reuters Foundation
The number of complaints of sexual abuse, harassment and other unacceptable behaviour against field workers at Medecins Sans Frontieres almost doubled last year, the medical aid organisation said on Monday.
MSF, which runs 43,000 field workers around the world, said it hoped the increase from 172 to 356 complaints in 2018 were an indication that increased scrutiny of the aid industry had encouraged more people to come forward.
The logo of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF – Doctors Without Borders) is seen on the back of an employee at the international medical humanitarian organisation MSF logistique centre in Merignac near Bordeaux, France, on 6th December, 2018. PICTURE: REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
Revelations last year that Oxfam staff used prostitutes in Haiti during an earthquake relief mission in 2010 snowballed into widespread reports of harassment and abuse in the sector.
Campaigners against abuse in the aid sector said the MSF figures highlighted increased awareness, but that organisations needed to do more to tackle the issues.
“We await recognition that radical transformation is urgently needed to move the whole sector forward into the 21st century and ensure it is fit for purpose,” said Alexia Pepper de Caires of the group NGO Safe Space.
MSF said 36 staff were dismissed as a result of sexual misconduct cases in 2018, up from 20 in 2017. The 2018 data did not include workers in its headquarters, it said.
MSF said the figures were probably still a “significant underestimate” of the true number of incidents and urged staff and patients to report unacceptable behaviour.
“Achieving and maintaining a work environment free from abuse and harassment is an on-going endeavour, for which we are all responsible,” it said.
The increase in sexual misconduct cases is well above the average 13 per cent rise in sex abuse and harassment last year cases on 2017 in a survey of 22 aid agencies carried out by the Thomson Reuters Foundation in February.