|
China’s Margaret Chan confirmed as new WHO chief
Beijing(China)—The World
Health Organization (WHO) on Thursday formally approved China’s Dr.
Margaret Chan as its new chief, to succeed Dr. Lee Jong-wook of South
Korea who died suddenly in May.
The WHO’s top decision-making World Health Assembly, composed of all 193
member states, agreed by voting that Dr. Chan will be the next
director-general, confirming a nomination a day earlier by the 34-nation
governing Executive Board. At a special session of the Assembly, 150
member countries voted in favor of Chan, with 2 against and 2
abstentions. Other member countries did not vote for various reasons,
diplomatic sources said.
A new director-general nominee needs a two-thirds majority of real votes
to get the Assembly approval for the post. Chan, 59, will take office in
January 2007 for a five-year term. The UN agency has been led by Acting
Director-General Dr. Anders Nordstrom of Sweden since May. Chan is the
first Chinese national that has been elected to head a UN specialized
body.
The former Hong Kong health chief joined the WHO in 2003, and she had
been the UN agency’s assistant director-general for communicable
diseases before announcing to campaign for the top post of
director-general in July. Her bid for the job had been fully supported
by the Chinese central government as well as the government of Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region, without which she could not have won the
election, Chan told reporters following her nomination on Wednesday.
The Chinese government said it had recommended Chan to head the WHO
because of her solid professional background, strong leadership, and
tremendous experience in public health. Chan had overcome Mexico’s
Health Minister Julio Frenk, WHO senior official Shigeru Omi of Japan,
Spain’s Health Minister Elena Salgado and another WHO official, Kuwait’s
Kazem Behbehani, to win the Executive Board nomination. Six other
candidates from different regions were eliminated in initial voting by
the 34-nation governing body.
The WHO was established in 1948 with the objective of helping all
peoples attain the highest possible level of health. The profile of the
organization has risen dramatically in recent years as the world
struggles to deal with such health challenges as a a threatened flu
pandemic, AIDS, chronic illnesses and dilapidated healthcare in poor
countries.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |