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WHO Top Official in Thailand Summoned over Accusations of Beating his Ethiopian Domestic Helper

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Ethiopian Yonas Tegegn of the World Health Organisation, seen here while receiving a five-million baht donation to WHO from Foreign Minister Tanasak Patimapragorn last September, has been accused of keeping...  Please credit and share this article with others using this link:http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/general/515351/police-call-in-who-official-over-maid-abuse. View our policies at http://goo.gl/9HgTd and http://goo.gl/ou6Ip. © Post Publishing PCL. All rights reserved.

Ethiopian Dr.Yonas Tegegn of the World Health Organisation, seen here while receiving a five-million baht donation to WHO from Foreign Minister Tanasak Patimapragorn last September

 

BANGKOK – Thailand’s Royal Thai Police has summoned, the World Health Organisation’s top official in Thailand today denied beating his Ethiopian domestic helper and treating her like a slave.

The 25-year-old unnamed maid filed a complaint with police last month accusing Dr Yonas Tegegn, the WHO’s representative in Thailand, and his wife of abusing her and forcing her to work without pay for nearly two years.

Police on Wednesday said they would investigate the allegations and question the couple, who are also Ethiopian nationals.

In a statement released Saturday, Tegegn denied the claims.

“These accusations made against me and my family are baseless. We deny any wrongdoing,” he said in a statement emailed to Agence France-Presse.

Tegegn added that he hoped both the media and Thailand’s legal system would “give us a fair chance to clear our name”.

The unnamed maid’s lawyer, Surapong Kongchantuk, from the Lawyers Council of Thailand said earlier in the week that she had worked for the family between July 2013 and March this year.

He alleged that she had not received a proper salary during that time, had to sleep in a room with the family’s dog, was physically abused and was only fed rice.

He said the maid escaped her employers when she was rescued by passers-by after a suicide attempt and is being helped by a local NGO to pursue a case against her employers.

In the statement, Tegegn said the maid began working with the family in June 2013 until March 8.

“After that date she was scheduled to return to her home country Ethiopia,” the statement said.

Tegegn added that “at all times we have treated her as a member of our family, with all dignity, respect and consideration”.

A WHO official in Bangkok said the organisation was “aware of the allegations in the media about a private matter between Dr Yonas and his former employee”.

“WHO is taking this allegations very seriously, and we are reviewing them according to WHO internal procedures,” the spokesman said.

According to a biography on the WHO’s website, Tegegn is a doctor with 30 years’ experience who has worked for the organisation in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Switzerland, India and North Korea before his Thailand posting.

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