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Newsmakers

UN chief virtually certain to get second term

(Agencies)
Updated: 2011-06-06 10:39
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UNITED NATIONS -The worst kept secret at the United Nations is that Ban Ki-moon wants a second term as secretary-general and will almost certainly get it, possibly this month.

As he travels the world, working behind the scenes and publicly to help defuse crises and push for action on issues like climate change and women's rights, Ban has also been quietly lobbying for support from the 192 UN member states for a second five-year term.

Egypt's UN Ambassador Maged Abdelaziz, whose country heads the 120-member Nonaligned Movement of mainly developing countries and China, said last month that he knew of no opposition to Ban.

"And my feeling is among the countries of the Nonaligned (Movement) that all of us are in support of his election," he told The Associated Press.

UN diplomats said Sunday the South Korean is expected to announce his candidacy for a second term at a news conference on Monday. The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because there has been no official announcement.

Ban's spokesperson would not confirm that the UN chief planned to announce that he is seeking a second-term.

"During the past four-and-a-half years, the Secretary-General has been working hard to address multiple global challenges, with a strong sense of commitment and mission," said spokesperson Martin Nesirky. "He believes that when the appropriate time comes, he will be able to express his views about his future."

Once Ban makes an announcement, the UN Security Council must give a positive recommendation, which it would do in a resolution that needs at least nine "yes" votes and no veto by a permanent member _ the US, Britain, France, Russia and China. The General Assembly would then elect Ban for a second term starting January 1, 2012, probably by acclamation.

The diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity because all discussions are private, said Ban's re-election could be wrapped up by the end of June.

The UN chief won endorsements from two former US ambassadors who served during George W. Bush's presidency _ John Bolton and Zalmay Khalilzad.

"I think by UN standards he deserves a second term," Bolton, a conservative and frequent UN critic, said Friday. "I think he has avoided the principal problem of his predecessor which is he has not concluded he is the secular pope. And I think that anyone who has resisted that for five years in the UN bureaucracy can be counted on to resist it for another five years."

Khalilzad, who said he worked very closely with Ban for almost two years, said "in very difficult circumstances he's done a good job."

"I found him to be a man with the right values to lead the United Nations," he told the AP recently. "He's committed to human rights, committed to democracy, committed to economic empowerment, focused on the plight of the disadvantaged. He's got courage. He speaks his mind. All of those are values that I think are important for a secretary-general."

Tim Wirth, president of the United Nations Foundation which was started to administer Ted Turner's $1 billion pledge to the UN, said

"Ban Ki-moon will be re-elected _ there's no doubt about it."

"The question now is, what's the agenda for the second term and how can this be aggressively pursued?" he said.

When Ban took over the helm of the UN from Kofi Annan, he called himself "a harmonizer and bridge-builder" and promised to restore the world body's tarnished reputation and push for peace in the Middle East and Sudan's conflict-wracked Darfur region.

The former South Korean foreign minister and career diplomat, who turns 67 on June 13, put climate change at the top of his agenda and said he would mobilize world leaders to take urgent action to combat it. And he promised to strengthen the three pillars of the United Nations: security, development, and human rights.

Wirth, a former US senator from Colorado, said the secretary-general has done "an extraordinary job of elevating the climate issue to the top of the agenda" and has made "a very deep commitment" to women with the establishment of a new agency, UN Women, headed by former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet.

But peace in the Middle East and Darfur remain elusive and so does a climate change deal. In addition, there are new issues to tackle including uprisings across the Arab world and the continuing fallout from the global economic crisis including unemployment and poverty.

Khalilzad, Bolton and Wirth agreed that Ban must do more in his second term to reform the UN bureaucracy.

One example, Khalilzad said, is the more than 9,000 mandates that the UN has to fulfill. Many are outdated and consume resources that could be used to deal with issues of current importance, he said.

As for the secretary-general lacking charisma, Wirth said that usually diplomats "are people who are very quiet, competently doing the job day in and day out, and Ban Ki-moon is certainly one of those, and he's the hardest working person I've ever known in my life."

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