United Nations Secretary-General
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Dag Hammarskjöld. The Soviet Union wanted him replaced by a three-man directorate. He was killed when his plane crashed during a peace mission. |
The
United Nations Secretary-General is the head of the
Secretariat, one of the principal divisions of the
United Nations. According to the
United Nations Charter, the Secretary-General is to be appointed by the
General Assembly on the recommendation of the
Security Council. It is widely considered the most influential role in the United Nations. Traditonally the Secretary general must in
de facto be a non-national of any of the permanent security council nations, and also terms must be represented by every continent de facto in a cycle.
The current Secretary-General is
Kofi Annan of
Ghana. His appointment began on
January 1,
1997, and his second term began on
January 1,
2002. "I am a cheerleader, I am a promoter, I am a salesman, I am a debt collector, I am a father confessor and there are other aspects I still have to discover," Annan has said in describing his job.
The current Deputy Secretary-General is
Mark Malloch Brown.
The Secretary-General is described by the Charter as the "chief administrative officer" of the organization. Originally some felt that the role of the Secretary-General should be purely administrative. It was the Norwegian
Trygve Lie, the first Secretary-General, who asserted that it was his role to speak out and act as leader and
mediator. Every Secretary-General since has spoken out on global issues and used his good offices to mediate disputes. This is in keeping with the original vision of
U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt, who held office just before the creation of the
UN and had much influence on its shaping, that the organization should be headed by a "world moderator."
The Secretary-General is
appointed to a five year term. UN Secretaries-General usually serve two consecutive terms, but sometimes only one. The Secretary-General is appointed by the General Assembly, on the recommendation of the
Security Council. Therefore, the selection is subject to the
veto of any of the five permanent members of the
Security Council.
By convention, the position rotates by geographic region, but since
Boutros Boutros-Ghali of
Egypt served only one term, a successor from
Africa,
Kofi Annan of
Ghana, was chosen. When Annan had finished his first term, the member states were so impressed with his performance that he was appointed for a second term despite the fact that the next Secretary-General should have been from
Asia. There has not yet been a Secretary-General from
North America or
Oceania.
Most Secretaries-General are compromise-candidates from
middle powers and with little prior fame. High-profile candidates are often touted for the job, but are almost always rejected as unpalatable to some. For instance, figures like
Charles de Gaulle,
Dwight Eisenhower and
Anthony Eden were considered for the first Secretary-General position, but were rejected in favour of the uncontroversial
Norwegian Trygve Lie. Due to
international politics and mechanicisms of
political compromise, there are many similarities between the process and ideals for selecting the Secretary-General and those of selecting leading figures in other international organizations, including the
election of
Popes in the
Roman Catholic Church.
Possible successors to Kofi Annan
Rumours have recently surfaced that former
U.S. President
Bill Clinton and former
Chilean President
Ricardo Lagos have set their sights on becoming Secretary-General. However, the nomination of Mr. Clinton, who is from a
Security Council state, would be a break from tradition, and both Clinton and Lagos have denied that they have aspirations to hold the job. Some consider it to be Asia's turn to fill the post. No announcement has been made, but behind the scenes
China is already pushing the candidacy of
Thai Deputy Prime Minister
Surakiart Sathirathai, who also seems to have the support of the U.S.,
Russia, and
Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Former Foreign Minister of
Timor-Leste and
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
José Ramos-Horta is also considered a strong candidate, as is
Jayantha Dhanapala of
Sri Lanka. Dhanapala is well reputed in UN circles especially for his contribution to disarmament issues.
Other possible candidates are South Korean Foreign Minister
Ban Ki-moon; undersecretary general for the department of public information
Shashi Tharoor of
India;
Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Prime Minister of
Norway and former Director General of the
WHO;
Tarja Halonen, the current President of
Finland;
Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, the current President of
Latvia, and
Aleksander Kwaśniewski, the former President of
Poland.
There is also a strong feeling that it should be a female Secretary-General this time, because secretaries for the past 60 years have all been men. Current
New Zealand Prime Minister
Helen Clark, and former New Zealand Governor-General Dame
Silvia Cartwright have been tipped as candidates after being promoted by international women's group
Equality Now.
Bill Clinton has himself suggested
Tony Blair, current British PM, when he retires.
In the early
1960s,
Soviet ruler Nikita Khrushchev led an effort to abolish the Secretary-General position. The numerical superiority of the Western powers meant that the Secretary-General would come from one of them, and would typically be sympathetic towards the West. Khrushchev advanced a proposal to replace the Secretary-General with a three-person leading council (a "
troika"): one member from the
West, one from the
Communist states, and one from the
Non-Aligned powers. This idea failed because the neutral powers failed to back the Soviet proposal.
*A fictional Secretary-General was featured in the
Arthur C. Clarke novel
Childhood's End.
*
UN General Assembly*
UN Security Council*
Undersecretary-General of the United Nations*
UN Economic and Social Council*
UN Trusteeship Council*
UN Secretariat*
International Court of Justice*
United Nations System*
Mundialization*
Presidentialism*
The Interpreter the first film to be filmed within the UN building
*
League of Nations*
U.N. Secretary-General webpage**
Special and Personal Representatives and Envoys of the Secretary-General**
How is the Secretary-General appointed?*
United Nations - Official site
*
History of the United Nations - UK Government site
*
Who will be the Next Secretary General?*
A blog on the UNSG race*
UNSGselection.org - For a Democratic, Transparent and Effective Selection Process for the United Nations Secretary-General**A Campaign of the
World Federalist Movement