Business Standard

FORMER UN CHIEF AND NOBEL LAUREATE DEAD

- KAMBIZ FOROOHAR & EKOW DONTOH BLOOMBERG

Former United Nations Secretary-General and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kofi Annan died on Saturday at the age of 80, his foundation said. Annan, a Ghanaian national, died in hospital in Bern, Switzerlan­d, in the early hours, his close associates said. Annan served two terms as the UN Secretary-General in New York from 1997-2006 and retired to live in a Swiss village in the Geneva countrysid­e.

Kofi Annan, the soft-spoken Ghanaian diplomat who served as the first United Nations secretary-general from sub-Saharan Africa, has died.

Annan died Saturday after an unspecifie­d short illness, according to a statement from his family and the Kofi Annan Foundation. He was 80.

“Kofi Annan was a global statesman and a deeply committed internatio­nalist who fought throughout his life for a fairer and more peaceful world,” the statement said.

Annan devoted almost his entire working life to the UN, navigating through multiple wars in West Asia, the Balkan breakup, African genocides and a raft of other crises over a career that spanned more than five decades.

He was the co-recipient, along with the UN, of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize, to recognise “work for a better organised and more peaceful world.” His opposition to the Iraq War in 2003 endeared him to antiwar groups and drew sharp criticism from US conservati­ves, including John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the UN who became national security adviser to President Donald Trump.

Although broadly admired as a bureaucrat­ic reformer and quiet insider, Annan was often assailed as ineffectiv­e. He was criticised for his handling of UN peacekeepi­ng operations at the time of the genocide of Rwandan Tutsis in 1994 and the killing of Muslims from the Bosnian town of Srebrenica the following year. His reputation was tainted further by a corruption scandal that touched his family and a failure to help resolve the Syrian crisis in 2012, when it was in its infancy.

Peacekeepi­ng push

“A lot of his time as secretary-general was devoted to redeeming both the UN’s battered reputation and his own,” said Richard Gowan, a fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. “Annan and his advisers managed to nurse UN operations back to life, and launch new blue missions in trouble spots like Congo and Liberia. If Annan hadn’t pushed the UN back into peacekeepi­ng in Africa, the organisati­on would be even less credible in global security than it is today.”

Following his two terms as secretary-general, Annan became a member of “The Elders,” an elite group of retired liberal leaders, including Nelson Mandela and Jimmy Carter, partly financed by Richard Branson to resolve conflicts around the world through informal counsel.

In February 2012, Annan was appointed the first UN special envoy to Syria in an attempt to end the civil war that had broken out the previous year. He resigned six months later, citing intransige­nce of both government and rebels. He called for UN peacekeepi­ng troops to be deployed, but world powers could not agree to such a plan.

Syrian uprising

In his 2012 memoir, Interventi­ons: A Life in War and Peace, Annan wrote that Syrian President Bashar alAssad’s response to the popular uprising “confirmed my more troubling suspicion that he was a man beholden to a small group of Alawite security officers and willing to employ any means to retain power.”

Nonetheles­s, Annan maintained his stature in world diplomacy and in 2016 was appointed to head a UN commission to investigat­e the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar.

Annan was born on April 8, 1938, in Kumasi, Gold Coast, which later changed its name to Ghana. He attended an elite boarding school in Cape Town before studying economics at the Kumasi College of Science and Technology. He received a Ford Foundation grant to complete his studies at Macalester College in St Paul, Minnesota.

Joins UN

After graduation in 1962, Annan joined the World Health Organisati­on, a UN agency, as a budget officer before leaving to earn a master’s degree in management at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in 1971.

Annan returned to the UN as head of personnel for the UN High Commission for Refugees in Geneva before moving to New York to become an assistant secretary-general. In 1992, after Secretary- General Boutros Boutros- Ghali establishe­d the Department of Peacekeepi­ng Operations, Annan became its head.

In January 1994, Annan failed to authorise UN peacekeepi­ng troops to seize a Hutu arms cache to preempt plans for mass killings in the capital. Annan ordered the local commander not to take any action and failed to keep the Security Council informed even as the genocide had started.

In his memoir, Annan accepts responsibi­lity, and writes that the UN “had no genuine, deep expertise on the country.”

Months after the Rwandan massacre, UN troops stood by as more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed by Serbian paramilita­ry units in the town of Srebrenica. Annan later apologised.

During the buildup to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Annan called on the U.S. and the U.K. not to attack without the support of the UN. He later called the invasion illegal.

Toward the end of his tenure, Annan became embroiled in charges that his son, Kojo Annan, had received payments from the Geneva-based Cotecna Inspection SA, which had won a lucrative contract under the UN’s oil-for-food program for Iraq.

An inquiry found in September 2005 that Annan knew about Saddam Hussein’s corruption of the almost $70 billion program and did little to stop the illegal activity.

He finished his term at the end of 2006, succeeded by Ban Ki-moon of South Korea. After the UN, Annan, set up the Kofi Annan Foundation, which works to promote good global governance and peace.

Annan devoted almost his entire working life to the UN, navigating through multiple wars in West Asia, the Balkan breakup, African genocides and a raft of other crises

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