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| Justin Forsyth, seen here at a UNICEF event September 18, 2017, has resigned as deputy director of the UN children's fund (AFP Photo/Bryan Bedder) |
United
Nations (United States) (AFP) - UNICEF deputy director Justin Forsyth on
Thursday resigned from the UN children's agency following complaints of
inappropriate behavior towards female staff in his previous post as head of
British charity Save The Children.
He
apologized again for his past "mistakes", but said his decision to
step down from the top role was driven by concern that the scandal would hurt
both organisations.
"I
want to make clear I am not resigning from UNICEF because of the mistakes I
made at Save the Children. They were dealt with through a proper process many
years ago," he said in a statement.
"I
apologized unreservedly at the time and face to face. I apologize again.
"There
is no doubt in my mind that some of the coverage around me is not just to
(rightly) hold me to account, but also to attempt to do serious damage to our
cause and the case for aid.
"I am
resigning because of the danger of damaging both UNICEF and Save the Children
and our wider cause. Two organisations I truly love and cherish. I can't let
this happen."
Forsyth
joined UNICEF in 2016 after leaving his post as chief executive officer of Save
the Children, where he faced complaints from three workers who said he had sent
inappropriate texts and commented on what young female staff were wearing.
UNICEF on
Wednesday said it was unaware that Forsyth faced those complaints when he was
recruited.
"Executive
Director Henrietta Fore today accepted Justin Forsyth's resignation from his
position as Deputy Executive Director of UNICEF," said a UNICEF statement.
"We are
grateful to Mr. Forsyth for his work over the past two years to advocate for
the most vulnerable children and help advance UNICEFâs mission to
save children's lives," it added.
"This
mission is now more important than ever."
In the wake
of the MeToo movement, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres this month
announced a zero-tolerance policy on sexual harassment and vowed new stepped-up
measures to address misconduct by staff at the world body.
A new
helpline for UN staff will be set up and UN-wide rules put in place to ensure
that claims are addressed in the same manner throughout the organization.
The
complaints at Save The Children follow revelations that Oxfam was investigating
26 cases of sexual misconduct since a crisis erupted over its handling of a
scandal involving prostitution in Haiti.
Three of
Oxfam's senior leaders have apologized for the charity's handling of an
internal investigation into the use of prostitutes by staff in Haiti following
the devastating 2010 earthquake.

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