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The
MaximsNews Global Pundit
Ian Williams

Ian Williams is an
international journalist and the past
president of the United Nations
Correspondents Association. This article
was published with permission from The
Nation. See his Blog: DeadlinePundit.
Ian
Williams is a Columnist for MaximsNews
Network. |
UN:
LOOKING EAST for a NEW LEADER by IAN
WILLIAMS (MaximsNews.com,
U.N.)
ALSO SEE: The
RACE to REPLACE KOFI: BAN KI-MOON?? |
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com
UN/ -- 30 September 2006 --
Ban
Ki-Moon, South
Korea's foreign minister, emerged as frontrunner
Thursday in an anonymous straw poll to choose
the next UN Secretary General. But was it a
"discourage" vote, a tactical offer to
negotiate, a "No way, Jose" or a
flat-out veto?
Such are the cryptic
signals sent by diplomats on the Security
Council and other UN members that the rest of
the world is now trying to decipher.
The South Korean ended up
leading the pack with fewer votes than he earned
in the last straw vote. One delegate who once
supported Ban has now lost interest and
effectively abstained, while another voted to
"discourage" his candidacy. But none
of the other candidates could muster enough
support to match his thirteen
"encouragements."
But was that discouragement
a veto or was it a ploy, as member states
exacted promises from Ban about positions their
nationals would fill?
Or were delegates playing
for time in the hope that Thai Deputy Prime
Minister Surakiart
Sathirathai, battered by a coup at home and
a poor straw vote showing, would pull out?
Would that clear the way
for another candidate from ASEAN (the
Association of South East Asian Nations), where
Singapore, always productive of potential
candidates, has two or three in hand?
And when it comes to a
public vote, would the delegate who slipped a
dagger in the dark into the back of a candidate
be prepared to do the same in public?
If this sounds like a papal
election with a Medici candidate, it's really
not. In fact, this election campaign is possibly
the most transparent in the UN's history. But
while the campaign itself is transparent, the
election itself is as murkily duplicitous as
ever.
Every five or ten years,
the world is amazed at the opacity of the
process for choosing the UN Secretary General.
According to the Charter, the Security Council,
currently fifteen members strong, recommends a
candidate to the General Assembly, which could
technically reject the recommendation.
To complicate matters,
after the anonymous straw polls, when the
Security Council publicly votes and comes to a
formal adoption, a candidate could win with only
nine votes--or lose with fourteen--if the one
holdout is a permanent member and votes against
the frontrunner--as happened in 1996, when US
Ambassador Madeleine Albright vetoed Boutros
Boutros-Ghali.
In the heady aftermath of
the cold war, impending Secretary General
elections have concentrated minds, bringing
regular calls for making the process more
transparent and democratic. Each election has
effectively ignored those calls, and the world
has immediately forgotten the fuss, heaving a
sigh of relief once the drawn-out process ends.
This time, with plenty of
notice, there were calls for the Security
Council to nominate two or more candidates so
the General Assembly could decide. Confident
that the Assembly would not be able to get its
act together and reject a Security Council
candidate, the Council members tacitly ignored
the idea.
So there is no provision in
the Charter for the Secretary Generalship to
rotate around the regions of the world (indeed,
the first two both came from Scandinavia). But
there is now a consensus that geographic
proportionality is important. The United States
and Britain both repudiate that principle but
bow to its application, not least since China
has made it plain this time around that it would
veto any non-Asian candidate.
The second runner-up
hitherto has been Shashi
Tharoor, the Indian candidate and currently
heading the UN's Department of Public
Information--and incidentally a prime mover
behind Kofi Annan's original candidacy. He is
clever and articulate--which in this race may
well work against him--and, most damning to
some, a UN insider.
But just as the
sub-Saharans never really regarded
Boutros-Ghali, an Egyptian, as a genuine
African, the concept of a Secretary General from
Asia was sorely tested by the candidacy of
Prince Zeid of Jordan.
He did surprisingly badly
in the straw poll, perhaps because of fears of
what the apocalyptic Christian right would make
of a descendent of the Prophet sitting in the
world's most prominent seat. But his poor
showing had more to do with the fact that East
Asians and South Asians don't really regard
Arabs as Asians, especially one who has shown a
most un-Confucian concern for human rights.
In previous years the
Security Council would solemnly consider even
self-nominations to the post. This time the
Council decided that countries had to nominate
candidates. In some ways, this is antithetical
to a core principle of the UN, since the
Secretary General is an international civil
servant, above country.
Beginning under
Boutros-Ghali and accentuated under Annan,
nongovernmental organizations have increased
their importance and visibility inside the UN
system. This time, candidates have been
approached with checklists for their views, in
particular on human rights issues.
They have been speaking
about their candidacies at venues ranging from
the Asia
Society to the International
Peace Academy, while touring the world
talking to governments in support of their case.
The Center for UN Reform Education has actually
interviewed most of the candidates and put their
results
in the public domain.
It would be difficult for
governments to support someone who was
dismissive of these tests, for fear of public
reaction. On the other hand, candidates have to
behave like American presidential primary
contenders, signaling one way for the masses
while steering the other for the
conservatives--or vice versa.
Interestingly, Ban Ki-moon,
who allegedly has support from both China and
the United States, expresses strong support for
the International
Criminal Court and for the Responsibility
to Protect--the doctrine of humanitarian
intervention adopted in principle at least
year's Summit.
Neither China nor the
United States is ecstatic about either concept,
but both are perceptive enough to realize the
slimness of the chances of any candidate who
opposes bedrock UN decisions.
But with the process
clearly trending toward blandness and
compromise, it is surprising that most of the
successful candidates have been as good as they
have been.
For example, Trygve Lie,
the first Secretary General, complained that Dag
Hammarskjold, his Swedish successor, was a
disastrously boring civil servant. Hammarskjold
grew to become the very model of a modern
Secretary General.
There is something about
the post, being the focus of so much
concentrated world attention and expectation,
that does that to a man, and would perhaps even
to a woman if the Council had been bold enough
to appoint one.
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
~~~~~~
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