Haiti's president says sexual misconduct by staff of British charity Oxfam is only the tip of an iceberg and called for investigations into Doctors Without Borders and other aid organisations which came to the country after its 2010 earthquake.
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"The Oxfam case is the visible part of the iceberg," President Jovenel Moise said in a phone interview with Reuters on Friday.
"It is not only Oxfam, there are other NGOs (non-governmental organisations) in the same situation, but they hide the information internally."
The scandal has already shaken the aid sector, with Britain and the European Union reviewing Oxfam's funding.
Oxfam, one of the world's biggest disaster relief charities, apologised this week for unspecified sexual misconduct uncovered in a 2011 internal investigation.
It has neither confirmed nor denied a recent Times of London report that some of its staff paid for sex with prostitutes.
"There should be an investigation into other organisations that have been working here since 2010," Moise said.
"For example, Doctors Without Borders had to repatriate about 17 people for misconduct which was not explained," he added.
It was not clear what cases Moise was referring to.
Geneva-based Doctors Without Borders, known as Medecins Sans Frontieres in non-English speaking countries, is looking into Moise's comments and welcomes scrutiny on the aid sector, said spokeswoman Analia Lorenzo.
She added that the organisation had zero tolerance of sexual misconduct.
On Wednesday, Doctors Without Borders, which sends medical staff around the world to regions stricken with war and disease, said it had dealt with 24 cases of sexual harassment or abuse among its 40,000 staff last year, and dismissed 19 people as a result.
It did not provide details of where the harassment or abuse took place, who was dismissed or whether the complaints were also registered with local law enforcement.
Roland Van Hauwermeiren, the former Oxfam official at the centre of the sex abuse scandal, said on Thursday he made mistakes by having a sexual relationship with the sister of a recipient of aid when working in Haiti, but denied paying for sex with prostitutes or abusing minors.
In an open letter to a broadcaster in his native Belgium, he said he feared that Oxfam, other aid workers and those they help would suffer from false accusations.
Australian Associated Press