Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa water, Sanitation Mar- Apr 2015 Vol.10 No.2 | Page 31

People services to medical microbiology, is currently Professor of Clinical Microbiology at the University of Cambridge. She has already started work with the Bloomsbury Research Institute and will take up her post full-time from September. Professor Peacock is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences, an Honorary Faculty Member at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, and deputy chair of the Medical Research Council Infection and Immunity Board. Inger Andersen takes up her duties as IUCN Director General Previously Vice President for the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) at the World Bank, Ms Andersen was responsible for the Bank’s strategy and operations throughout the region. She succeeds Julia MartonLefèvre who served as IUCN Director General since January 2007. A Danish national, Ms Andersen began her career working on desertification and dryland issues in Sudan, and with the UN Inger Andersen, IUCN Director Sudano-Sahelian Office in New York. With the establishment of the Global Environment Facility in 1992, she was asked to serve as the Arab Region Coordinator for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), a position she held until 1999 when she moved to the World Bank. At the World Bank, Ms Andersen worked primarily on water, environment and sustainable development, with special focus on the Africa and MENA Regions. In 2010, she was named Vice President for Sustainable Development, overseeing the technical quality of the Bank’s portfolio and leading the Sustainable Development Network. In view of her long association with the Middle East, Ms Andersen was requested to take on the Vice President position for the region at the onset of the Arab Spring the following year. Ms Andersen was also appointed Head of the CGIAR Fund Council in 2010. “I am extremely pleased and honoured to be taking on the role of Director General at IUCN,” said Ms Andersen. “As an indispensable source of fact-based intelligence for the conservation community and beyond, IUCN is uniquely positioned to help the world tackle this century’s vast environmental and societal challenges. I am delighted to be leading those efforts.” Madonna Raises $5.5 million for Malawi Flood Victims Pop Icon Madonna has managed to raise $5.5 million (MK2.4 billion) to support people displaced by the devastating floods which continue to wreak havoc across Malawi. The pop queen, who was joined by Photo: Madonna/Facebook rapper Gucci Mane, raised the funds from ticket sales and live auction during an event dubbed A Night to Benefit Malawi and UNICEF held in New York. According to a statement from Madonna’s Raising Malawi, the proceeds will be split equally between UNICEF and Madonna’s organization Raising Malawi. IPCC Chief Resigns After Sexual Harassment Accusations Interim chairman takes over as longtime head Rajendra Pachauri faces sexual harassment accusations from several former employees The United Nations’ climate science body, which is currently meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, will now be headed temporarily by Vice Chairman Ismail El Gizouli. Rajendra Pachauri, Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), resigned on February 24 following accusations of sexual harassment by a former employee at the energy think tank he heads in New Delhi. The United Nations’ climate science body, which was then meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, was headed temporarily by Vice Chairman Ismail El Gizouli. Pachauri, 74, did not travel to Nairobi that week for the IPCC meeting due to a police investigation into a complaint filed Feb. 13 by a 29-year-old employee. According to the complaint, she accused Pachauri of sending text messages and emails since September 2013 that were inappropriate (ClimateWire, Feb. 19). Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • March - April 2015 31