Secretary-General-designate Mr Antonio Guterres of Portugal is sworn in by President of the UN General Assembly Peter Thomson (R) at UN headquarters in New York, USA |
Former Portuguese Prime
Minister Antonio Guterres was sworn in on Monday as the ninth United Nations
Secretary-General, pledging to personally help broker peace in various
conflicts and reform the 71-year old world body to become more effective.
Reuters
report continues:
Guterres,
67, will replace Ban Ki-moon, 72, of South Korea on Jan. 1. Ban steps down at
the end of 2016 after two five-year terms. Guterres was Portugal's prime
minister from 1995 to 2002 and U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees from 2005 to
2015.
"From
the acute crises in Syria, Yemen, South Sudan and elsewhere, to long-running
disputes including the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, we need mediation,
arbitration as well as creative diplomacy," Guterres said.
"As
part of my good offices I am ready to engage personally in conflict resolution
where it brings added value," he told the 193-member General Assembly.
Guterres
beat out 12 other candidates, seven of whom were women, amid a push for the
first woman to be elected. He said on Monday he aimed to have gender parity
among senior U.N. leadership within his five year term.
Diplomats
said Guterres is expected to shortly name Nigeria's environment minister Amina
Mohammed as his deputy secretary-general. He is also planning to appoint a
woman as his chief of staff before the end of the year, diplomats said.
Before
her appointment as environment minister a year ago, Mohammed was U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's special adviser on post-2015 development
planning - a role that culminated last year with the adoption by the General
Assembly of sustainable development goals for the next 15 years.
Guterres
is the first former head of government to be elected to run the world body and
that experience will be reflected in how he operates, diplomats said.
"He's
looking for a big shake-up, reshuffle," said a senior U.N. diplomat,
speaking on condition of anonymity. "He's looking to create ... a
different feeling, with the under-secretary-generals much more part of a
collective leadership of the U.N."
"Having
what he calls a cabinet, like when he was prime minister, his senior officials
would come together every week and collectively they would have responsibility
for the totality of the organization," the diplomat said.
Diplomats were now watching to see who Guterres appoints to senior U.N. positions amid speculation by diplomats and U.N. officials that China would like one of its nationals to head peacekeeping and that Russia is keen to have a senior role.
No comments:
Post a Comment