Who will be the new UN Secretary-General?

CNBC
Who will be the new UN Secretary-General?

Today, Russia took over the chairmanship of the UN Security Council. The Russian delegation will direct the work of a key structure of the world organization during the aggravation of the situation in Syria as well as during a crucial stage of election to replace Ban Ki-moon as Secretary-General, which takes place in connection with the expiration of the second term of Ban Ki-moon on December 31st, who held the post since January 1st  2007 and was re-elected for a second term, which began on January 1st,  2012. On Monday, the Security Council held a third round of voting. As  the previous two rounds, it was held behind the closed doors. Vestnik Kavkaza invites our readers to get acquainted with the CNBC article on the elections of a new Secretary-General.

The next straw poll by 14 countries takes place on Wednesday October 5, and should narrow the field sharply as we learn preferences of the five veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council. The selection is highly political with Russia, who insist the next U.N. leader should come from Eastern Europe, supportive of Bulgaria's Irina Bokova. Bokova is a Bulgarian politician and the Director-General of UNESCO. In 2015 she was cited by several media as the front-runner in the race to succeed Ban Ki-moon.

Irina Bokova

Recently, Prime Minister of Bulgaria, Boyko Borisov announced the nomination of the European Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva for the post of the UN Secretary -General. Thus, Georgieva will replace  Irina Bokova, who was previously appointed by the Bulgarian authorities as a candidate for a possible successor of Ban Ki-moon. Borisov said that Bulgaria intends to support the candidacy of Bokova only if she takes the first or second place in the intermediate results of voting at the election of the head of the UN . However, last week Bokova took only the sixth place.

A late entrance to the race from EU Budget Commissioner, Kristalina Georgiana, has antagonized Moscow. Georgiana, also a Bulgarian, has the backing of her government and is seen as a preferred candidate by western Europe and in particular, Germany.

 Kristalina Georgiana

The appointment to the role is decided by a series of ballots, where each voting member offers an "encourage", "discourage" or "no opinion" status to each candidate.

Former Portuguese Prime Minister and U.N. High Commissioner, António Guterres, has emerged as the clear leader, but the next round of voting allows vetoes to be enforced by permanent members of the Security Council. With Moscow openly preferring an Eastern European candidate, it is thought Guterres' run as favorite could swiftly come to an end.

António Guterres

With five voting rounds now complete, the second most "encouraged" candidate is Vuk Jeremic , a 41-year old diplomat who served as Serbia's minister of foreign affairs between 2007 and 2012.However, it is reported in Serbian media that the pro-Russia stance of the country's politicians means the United States will almost certainly use their veto to end his ambitions.

Vuk Jeremic

Half of the candidates are women and in August, incumbent leader Ban Ki-moon expressed that for the first time a woman should take the job.

Helen Clark

One candidate, former Prime Minister of New Zealand and current Administrator of the United Nations Development Program, Helen Clark, told CNBC Wednesday that while she is not currently considered a favorite, next week's ballot could soon change that.

"In the end this person is going to be someone that the permanent members, who each carry a veto, can agree on. So you can pile up a lot of votes but not necessarily the votes where you need them," she said.

Clark argued that it is time to lift the profile of secretary-general above that of a diplomat and that her experience as a prime minister puts her as the most qualified person for the job.

"I've been involved across big decisions and when I came to the U.N. development, everything I'd learned about peace, security, economic and environmental issues came in to play, because development is right across that.

"So, I would say in terms of breadth and strength of experience there is no equal to me in this game," she said.

 

 

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