Investigations

UN staff in Uganda accused of sexual abuse and exploitation

By Correspondent 

The United Nations recently launched an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse and exploitation of vulnerable women by members of its staff in Uganda’s drought-stricken northeastern Karamoja region.

The inquiry by the UN’s Office of Internal Oversight Services, which was carried out late last year, followed allegations by a whistleblower of sexual abuse and exploitation by a United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) staffer against a “female victim” – and a more general pattern of serious sexual misconduct by other UN staff working in what is Uganda’s poorest region.

The allegations centred on the World Food Programme compound in the town of Moroto, and involved UN staff demanding sex from local women in exchange of food, and the hiring of sex workers who were brought onto the UN base, several UN personnel in Moroto told the press, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Staff of several UN agencies stay in the WFP compound, which provides office space and sleeping quarters in a region where more than 500,000 people are facing food shortages.

“We have been informed of the allegations made against UN staff residing at the compound managed by WFP in Moroto and are investigating,” Amanda Lawrence-Brown, WFP’s Nairobi-based regional spokesperson, told the press.

“There is no place for any form of sexual harassment, exploitation, or abuse at the World Food Programme, including by non-WFP staff residing at compounds managed by WFP in the field,” she said.

Lawrence-Brown noted that for security reasons she could not divulge how many UN staff stay at the base, but said WFP is also investigating any breaches of security protocols. Private guards at the compound are supposed to vet all visitors to the base, she added.

Back up information

In response to the allegations of sexual abuse and misconduct by staff in Moroto, Rosa Malango, the UN’s resident coordinator in Uganda, sent an email to all UN heads of agencies in September, 2020.

“I look forward to the updates from UN heads on action taken so far including the immediate suspension of staff pending the conclusions of investigations,” Malango said in her email.

“Internal procedures are under way and we cannot comment until the facts have been established,” Malango told the press separately. “These are allegations which need to be investigated first.”

Malango emphasized that the UN has a zero-tolerance approach to sexual harassment and abuse, and said the “concerned agencies were dealing with the issue”.

In an email sent to the press entitled, “Uganda the next Haiti for the UN”, a group of UN staff condemned Malango for her message to the agency heads.

The group, whose members were unidentified, claimed that Malango’s note contained “confidential and sensitive information” that should “never have been circulated to internal email groups”.

The email, sent to press via a private gmail account, accused Malango of playing internal UN politics as part of an alleged attempt to “divert from her own incompetence”.

The Haiti reference in the title of the email was possibly a nod to the Oxfam scandal when the British NGO was accused of covering up claims that staff were sexually exploiting victims of the 2010 earthquake.

Malango said her note to UN agency heads should not have been shared externally.

Karamoja was the centre of an earlier UN scandal. In 2019, at least four people died and nearly 300 others became unwell after eating WFP fortified cereal. The agency was accused of negligence.

Semi-arid Karamoja, on the border with Kenya, is Uganda’s least-developed region, where one in three children are stunted as a result of poor nutrition.