Daily Times (Primos, PA)

France’s Audrey Azoulay wins vote to be next UNESCO chief

-

PARIS » UNESCO’s executive board on Friday chose former French Culture Minister Audrey Azoulay to be the U.N. cultural agency’s next leader over a Qatari candidate in an unusually heated race overshadow­ed by Mideast tensions.

The U.S. announceme­nt this week that it’s quitting UNESCO rocked the multi-day election and heightened concerns about the agency’s funding and future direction.

Azoulay succeeds outgoing Director-General Irina Bokova of Bulgaria, whose eight-year term was marred by financial woes and criticism over Palestine’s inclusion as a member. On Thursday, the U.S. and Israel said they plan to pull out of the Paris-based organizati­on over its perceived anti-Israel bias.

The 45-year-old took the stage to chants of “Audrey! Audrey!” following her victory and said the response to UNESCO’s problems was to reform the agency, not to walk away — an understate­d rebuke of the U.S. and Israel.

“In this moment of crisis, I believe we must invest in UNESCO more than ever, look to support and reinforce it, and to reform it. And not leave it,” she said.

In a short address, she also thanked “the Executive Board member states that gave me their trust” — in her surprise 30-28 vote win Friday over Qatari candidate Hamad bin Abdulaziz al-Kawari.

UNESCO’s general assembly will have to sign off next month on the executive board’s leadership pick, but it’s seen as a formality.

The new director will set priorities for the organizati­on best known for its World Heritage program to protect cultural sites and traditions. The agency also works to improve education for girls, promote an understand­ing of the Holocaust’s horrors, defend media freedom and coordinate science about climate change.

Azoulay, a Jewish woman, had started the week’s voting with much less support but built up backing as other candidates dropped out and won a runoff earlier Friday against Egypt’s candidate.

The vote was a huge blow to Arab states, who had long wanted to lead the U.N. Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on. UNESCO has previously had European, Asian, African and American chiefs, but never an Arab one since the organizati­on was founded in 1945 following World War II to promote world peace through culture.

The agency’s inclusion of Palestine as a member state in 2011 complicate­d this push, as did Qatar’s diplomatic dispute with Arab neighbors over accusation­s of sponsoring Islamic extremism.

Azoulay will be the second French leader of the organizati­on since Rene Maheu, UNESCO’s director general from 1961-74. Azoulay’s father is Moroccan and was an influentia­l adviser to Moroccan kings, so she does have a connection to the Arab world.

“UNESCO is going through a profound crisis,” Azoulay told journalist­s on Friday after making it to the final vote. “As a response to these difficulti­es, France has chosen not to leave but at the contrary to invest more ... because we believe in multilater­alism. We believe in universal values.”

 ?? MICHEL EULER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? UNESCO’S new elected director-general, France’s Audrey Azoulay, smiles as she arrives the council hall at the UNESCO headquarte­rs in Paris, France, Friday. UNESCO’s executive board has chosen France’s Audrey Azoulay as the Paris-based U.N. agency’s new...
MICHEL EULER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UNESCO’S new elected director-general, France’s Audrey Azoulay, smiles as she arrives the council hall at the UNESCO headquarte­rs in Paris, France, Friday. UNESCO’s executive board has chosen France’s Audrey Azoulay as the Paris-based U.N. agency’s new...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States