Gulf News

The ‘nearly impossible’ job of UN chief

Antonio Guterres will need to muster all the great skills and good will which landed him the job of world’s top diplomat

- Special to Gulf News

magine a job applicatio­n which says: strong preference is for a woman from Eastern Europe. And then, the winning candidate? It’s a man from Western Europe.

“I’m not a woman and there’s nothing I can do about that,” Antonio Guterres tells me with an apologetic smile, in an interview for BBC World News last week — his first interview after he received a standing ovation and a unanimous vote in the UN General Assembly. But the next UN SecretaryG­eneral took pains to emphasise he was “deeply committed to a big push for gender equality in the UN.”

His transition team, comprising three women and two men from Tunisia, the United States, South Korea, Portugal and Jamaica, is already at work to prepare him for his new job which starts on January 1. One of his senior aides tells me that his Deputy UN Secretary-General will be a “woman from the south.”

Guterres is acutely aware he will be judged on his promise to promote gender equality. There’s added emphasis in the midst of accusation­s of systemic gender bias in the UN club which weighed against the five female candidates who competed against as many men in the final list.

The 67 year old whose candidacy marked a rare consensus and clarity in the Security Council, the UN’s most powerful body, will face Herculean battles on many fronts.

“He inherits a very difficult world,” Russia’s UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin says of the man he describes as the “the best candidate available” for the job. When I remind Ambassador Churkin that the first UN Secretary-General called the job “the most impossible job on earth” he replies “almost impossible.”

Guterres will need to muster all the great skills and good will which landed him the job of world’s top diplomat. That includes the political savvy developed during his years as Portugal’s Prime Minister and President of the Socialist Internatio­nal. There’s also his understand­ing of the inner workings of the UN system and the world at large gained through his decade as the UN’s Refugee Chief.

Doors were open even though he’s known as a man who speaks his mind. His was a diplomat’s school of hard knocks as he berated and cajoled world leaders, often unsuccessf­ully, to do more to respond to the worst refugee crisis in decades.

On a panel of the World Economic Forum, with senior Jordanian and Western officials insisting they could not open their doors to more refugees because of security fears, Guterres bluntly retorted: ”Refugees are not terrorists.” Then, he said it again, in case it had not been clear.

In his interview with me for BBC World News, Guterres describes his job as “an honest broker, a messenger for peace, and a bridge builder.” And he acknowledg­es his “first and biggest challenge” would be to end the suffering of Syria which “has broken our hearts.”

The agony and anguish of Aleppo symbolises the world’s failure to stop a nation’s descent into appalling destructio­n and despair. Successive UN Syria envoys have cited the gridlock in the UN Security Council as a major element in their failure to stop the fighting and provide vital humanitari­an aid.

Guterres will open this file at a time when tensions between Russia and the United States, backing rival sides in this terribly tangled conflict, are at their worst since the Cold War of decades ago.

It’s still not clear what Guterres can bring to the table. often said the job is more Secretary than General.

But Guterres will be judged by what difference he makes in the lives of women and men, girls and boys, the world over. That’s the job he’s signed up for. It’s

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