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Ban Ki-Moon
to be next UN chief
UNITED NATIONS—South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon has been
unanimously chosen to lead the United Nations for the next five years
and accepted the position saying the world body needs to promise less
and deliver more.
The 62-year-old career diplomat will take over from Ghanaian chief Kofi
Annan in January and will becomes the world body's eighth secretary
general and the first Asian UN chief since U Thant of Burma led the
organisation from 1961 to 1971.
"I am deeply honoured to become the second Asian to lead the
organisation," Ban told the General Assembly after his nomination
Friday.
"The true measure of success for the UN is not how much we promise, but
how much we deliver for those who need us most," he said, adding: "The
UN is needed now more than ever before."
Ban, a mild-mannered figure, has played key roles both as South Korea's
foreign minister and earlier as Seoul's ambassador to the United Nations
in trying to resolve the long-standing North Korean nuclear crisis.
He outlined fighting poverty, HIV/ AIDS, environmental degradation and
protecting human rights Friday as among the priorities of his tenure
along with containing the spread of weapons of mass destruction and
combating terrorism.
The United Nations body is under increasing pressure to reform, notably
from its biggest financial backer and host the United States, but Ban
hinted that reforms would only come at an appropriate time.
"We reform not to please others, but because we value what this
organisation stands for. We reform because we believe in its future.
"We cannot change everything at once. But if we choose wisely, and work
together transparently, flexibly and honestly, progress in a few areas
will lead to progress in a few more," he added.
The European Union and United States led the congratulations, with US
ambassador to the UN John Bolton saying: "We believe he is the right
person to lead the United Nations at this decisive moment in its
history, particularly as the UN struggles to fulfil the terms of the
reform agenda that world leaders agreed to last fall."
President George W. Bush welcomed the appointment, with the White House
saying in a satetment that Ban assumes his role at a time of great
challenge and opportunity at the United Nations.
"We will rely on his leadership to help steer the UN Organization
through the reforms already underway, and to propel the organization
even further on the path of reform," the White House stressed.
Ban's appointment was a mere formality after the powerful 15-member
Security Council recommended him as Annan's successor on Monday, an
event overshadowed by North Korea declaring it had conducted a nuclear
test.
His election coincides with a major international crisis over North
Korea's nuclear program and he somberly welcomed his nomination by the
Security Council Monday just after Pyongyang's nuclear announcement.
"This should be a moment of joy. But instead, I stand here with a very
heavy heart," he said.
Ban was the only remaining candidate in the race for the coveted,
high-profile job after six other contenders withdrew.
Annan congratulated his successor, hailing him as "a man with a truly
global mind" with "exceptional qualifications."
And he repeated the greeting made more than 50 years ago by the first UN
secretary general, Norway's Trygve Lie, to his Swedish successor, Dag
Hammarskjold: "You are about to take over the most impossible job on
Earth."
"While that may be true, I would add: this is also the best possible job
on Earth," Annan said.
Ban rose to prominence talking tough on North Korean issues. With 33
months in office, he is one of South Korea's longer-serving foreign
ministers -- surviving the sometimes turbulent diplomacy on the divided
peninsula.
Ban will take up his post in January after 68-year-old Annan steps down
on December 31 after completing two five-year terms.
Other contenders for the job were Indian diplomat Shashi Tharoor;
Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga; former Thai deputy prime
minister Surakiart Sathirathai; Jordan's UN ambassador Prince Zeid
al-Hussein; Sri Lankan diplomat Jayantha Dhanapala and Afghanistan's
former finance minister Ashraf Ghani.—Agencies |