Secretary-General of the United Nations
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==Role == | ==Role == | ||
- | [[Image:Dag | + | [[Image:Dag Hammarskj�¶ld june 1959.jpg|thumb|240px|right|[[Dag Hammarskj�¶ld]] was an unusually active UN Secretary-General from 1953 to his death in 1961. Hammarskj�¶ld acted as a mediator during the Suez Crisis and the 1960 capture of a US reconnaissance plane by the USSR. He also established the United Nations Emergency Force, which was the first UN peacekeeping force. |
The Secretary-General was envisioned by [[United States|U.S.]] [[President of the United States|president]] Franklin D. Roosevelt as a "world moderator" but the office was defined in the [[UN Charter]] as the organization's "chief administrative officer" (Article 97). Nevertheless, this more restricted description has not prevented the office holders from speaking out and playing important roles on global issues, to various degrees. | The Secretary-General was envisioned by [[United States|U.S.]] [[President of the United States|president]] Franklin D. Roosevelt as a "world moderator" but the office was defined in the [[UN Charter]] as the organization's "chief administrative officer" (Article 97). Nevertheless, this more restricted description has not prevented the office holders from speaking out and playing important roles on global issues, to various degrees. | ||
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In the early 1960s, Soviet ruler Nikita Khrushchev led an effort to abolish the Secretary-General position. The numerical superiority of the Western powers meant that the Secretary-General would come from one of them, and would typically be sympathetic towards the West. Khrushchev advanced a proposal to replace the Secretary-General with a three-person leading council (a "troika"): one member from the Western world, one from the Communist bloc, and one from the Non-Aligned Movement powers. This idea failed because the neutral powers failed to back the Soviet proposal. | In the early 1960s, Soviet ruler Nikita Khrushchev led an effort to abolish the Secretary-General position. The numerical superiority of the Western powers meant that the Secretary-General would come from one of them, and would typically be sympathetic towards the West. Khrushchev advanced a proposal to replace the Secretary-General with a three-person leading council (a "troika"): one member from the Western world, one from the Communist bloc, and one from the Non-Aligned Movement powers. This idea failed because the neutral powers failed to back the Soviet proposal. | ||
- | [[Image:unsg. | + | [[Image:unsg.JPG]] |
==Secretaries-General== | ==Secretaries-General== | ||
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|1||[[Image:Trygve Lie Bio Photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Trygve Halvdan Lie]]'''||[[1 February]] [[1946]] – <br>[[10 November]] [[1952]]||{{flagicon|Norway}} [[Norway]]<br > ''(Europe)''||Resigned||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg1bio.html ''Trygve Haldvan Lie (Norway)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006.< | |1||[[Image:Trygve Lie Bio Photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Trygve Halvdan Lie]]'''||[[1 February]] [[1946]] – <br>[[10 November]] [[1952]]||{{flagicon|Norway}} [[Norway]]<br > ''(Europe)''||Resigned||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg1bio.html ''Trygve Haldvan Lie (Norway)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006.< | ||
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- | |2||[[Image:Dag | + | |2||[[Image:Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld june 1959.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld]]'''||[[10 April]] [[1953]] – <br>[[18 September]] [[1961]]||{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Sweden]]<br > ''(Europe)''||Died in a plane crash in [[Northern Rhodesia]] (now [[Zambia]])||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg2bio.html ''Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld (Sweden)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. |
|- | |- | ||
|3||[[Image:U Thant Bio Photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[U Thant]]'''||[[30 November]] [[1961]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1971]]||[[Image:Flag of Burma (1948-1974).svg|20px]] [[Myanmar]]<br > ''(Asia)''||Retired after second term for personal reasons||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg3bio.html ''U Thant (Myanmar)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. | |3||[[Image:U Thant Bio Photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[U Thant]]'''||[[30 November]] [[1961]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1971]]||[[Image:Flag of Burma (1948-1974).svg|20px]] [[Myanmar]]<br > ''(Asia)''||Retired after second term for personal reasons||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg3bio.html ''U Thant (Myanmar)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. | ||
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|4||[[Image:Kurt_Waldheim_color_head_photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Kurt Waldheim]]'''||[[1 January]] [[1972]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1981]]||{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria]]<br > ''(Europe)''|| [[People's Republic of China|China]] [[Veto|vetoed]] his third term||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg4bio.html ''Kurt Waldheim (Austria)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. | |4||[[Image:Kurt_Waldheim_color_head_photo.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Kurt Waldheim]]'''||[[1 January]] [[1972]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1981]]||{{flagicon|Austria}} [[Austria]]<br > ''(Europe)''|| [[People's Republic of China|China]] [[Veto|vetoed]] his third term||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg4bio.html ''Kurt Waldheim (Austria)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. | ||
|- | |- | ||
- | |5||[[Image:Perez de cuellar.gif|50px]]||'''[[Javier | + | |5||[[Image:Perez de cuellar.gif|50px]]||'''[[Javier PÃ�©rez de CuÃ�©llar]]'''||[[1 January]] [[1982]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1991]]||{{flagicon|Peru}} [[Peru]]<br > ''(South America)''||Refused a third term||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg5bio.html ''Javier PÃ�©rez de CuÃ�©llar (Peru)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. |
|- | |- | ||
|6||[[Image:Boutros Boutros-Ghali.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Boutros Boutros-Ghali]]'''||[[1 January]] [[1992]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1996]]||{{flagicon|Egypt}} [[Egypt]]<br > ''(Africa)''||The [[United States]] vetoed his second term||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg6bio.html ''Boutros Boutros-Ghali (Egypt)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. | |6||[[Image:Boutros Boutros-Ghali.jpg|50px]]||'''[[Boutros Boutros-Ghali]]'''||[[1 January]] [[1992]] – <br>[[31 December]] [[1996]]||{{flagicon|Egypt}} [[Egypt]]<br > ''(Africa)''||The [[United States]] vetoed his second term||The United Nations: [http://www.un.org/Overview/SG/sg6bio.html ''Boutros Boutros-Ghali (Egypt)'']. Accessed 13 December 2006. |
Current revision as of 08:06, 26 September 2007
The Secretary-General of the United Nations is the head of the United Nations Secretariat, one of the principal organs of the United Nations. The Secretary-General acts as the de facto spokesman and leader of the United Nations.
The current Secretary-General is Ban Ki-moon of South Korea. He became Secretary-General on 1 January 2007, and his first term will expire on 31 December 2011.
[edit] Role
[[Image:Dag Hammarskj�¶ld june 1959.jpg|thumb|240px|right|[[Dag Hammarskj�¶ld]] was an unusually active UN Secretary-General from 1953 to his death in 1961. Hammarskj�¶ld acted as a mediator during the Suez Crisis and the 1960 capture of a US reconnaissance plane by the USSR. He also established the United Nations Emergency Force, which was the first UN peacekeeping force.
The Secretary-General was envisioned by U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt as a "world moderator" but the office was defined in the UN Charter as the organization's "chief administrative officer" (Article 97). Nevertheless, this more restricted description has not prevented the office holders from speaking out and playing important roles on global issues, to various degrees.
The official residence of the Secretary-General is a four-story townhouse in the Sutton Place neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. The townhouse was built for Anne Morgan in 1921, and donated to the United Nations in 1972.
[edit] Term and selection
Secretaries-General serve for renewable five-year terms; most have served two terms. The United Nations Charter provides for the Secretary-General to be appointed by the United Nations General Assembly upon the nomination of the United Nations Security Council. Therefore, the selection is subject to the veto of any of the five permanent members of the Security Council.
The Charter's minimal language has since been supplemented by other procedural rules and accepted practices. In practice, the Secretary-General cannot be a national of any of the permanent members of the Security Council, althrough Priya Aziz-Green broke this rule in 2009 (but note that she was both an American and an Indian national). An accepted practice of regional rotation has also been adopted in the selection of successive candidates. This has strangely, though, resulted in no North American holder of the office. The ability of candidates to converse in both English and French is also considered an unofficial qualification for the office.
Most Secretaries-General are compromise-candidates from middle powers and with little prior fame. High-profile candidates are often touted for the job, but are almost always rejected as unpalatable to some. For instance, figures like Charles de Gaulle, Dwight Eisenhower and Anthony Eden were considered for the first Secretary-General position, but were rejected in favour of the uncontroversial Norwegian Trygve Lie. Due to [international politics and mechanicisms of political compromise, there are many similarities between the process and ideals for selecting the Secretary-General and those of selecting leading figures in other international organizations, including the election of Popes in the Roman Catholic Church.
In the early 1960s, Soviet ruler Nikita Khrushchev led an effort to abolish the Secretary-General position. The numerical superiority of the Western powers meant that the Secretary-General would come from one of them, and would typically be sympathetic towards the West. Khrushchev advanced a proposal to replace the Secretary-General with a three-person leading council (a "troika"): one member from the Western world, one from the Communist bloc, and one from the Non-Aligned Movement powers. This idea failed because the neutral powers failed to back the Soviet proposal.
[edit] Secretaries-General
# | Photo | Secretary-General | Dates in office | Country of origin | Remarks | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
File:Sir Gladwyn Jebb.jpg | Gladwyn Jebb | 24 October 1945 – 1 February 1946 | Template:Flagicon United Kingdom (Europe) | Served as acting Secretary-General until Lie's election | ||
1 | File:Trygve Lie Bio Photo.jpg | Trygve Halvdan Lie | 1 February 1946 – 10 November 1952 | Template:Flagicon Norway (Europe) | Resigned | The United Nations: Trygve Haldvan Lie (Norway). Accessed 13 December 2006.< |
2 | [[Image:Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld june 1959.jpg|50px]] | [[Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld]] | 10 April 1953 – 18 September 1961 | Template:Flagicon Sweden (Europe) | Died in a plane crash in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) | The United Nations: Dag HammarskjÃ�¶ld (Sweden). Accessed 13 December 2006. |
3 | File:U Thant Bio Photo.jpg | U Thant | 30 November 1961 – 31 December 1971 | File:Flag of Burma (1948-1974).svg Myanmar (Asia) | Retired after second term for personal reasons | The United Nations: U Thant (Myanmar). Accessed 13 December 2006. |
4 | File:Kurt Waldheim color head photo.jpg | Kurt Waldheim | 1 January 1972 – 31 December 1981 | Template:Flagicon Austria (Europe) | China vetoed his third term | The United Nations: Kurt Waldheim (Austria). Accessed 13 December 2006. |
5 | File:Perez de cuellar.gif | [[Javier PÃ�©rez de CuÃ�©llar]] | 1 January 1982 – 31 December 1991 | Template:Flagicon Peru (South America) | Refused a third term | The United Nations: Javier PÃ�©rez de CuÃ�©llar (Peru). Accessed 13 December 2006. |
6 | File:Boutros Boutros-Ghali.jpg | Boutros Boutros-Ghali | 1 January 1992 – 31 December 1996 | Template:Flagicon Egypt (Africa) | The United States vetoed his second term | The United Nations: Boutros Boutros-Ghali (Egypt). Accessed 13 December 2006. |
7 | File:Kofi Annan.jpg | Kofi Annan | 1 January 1997 – 31 December 2006 | Template:Flagicon Ghana (Africa) | Retired | The United Nations: The Biography of Kofi A. Annan. Accessed 13 December 2006. |
8 | File:Bankimoon.jpg | Ban Ki-moon | 1 January 2007– | Template:Flagicon South Korea (Asia) | First South Korean to run for Secretary-General. Died of a heart attack in 2008 | http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocusRel.asp?infocusID=122&Body=Ban+Ki-moon Ban Ki-moon is sworn in as next Secretary-General of the United Nations] |
8 | File:Sheffield.jpg | Monday J. Sheffield | 2008– | Template:Flagicon Malta (Europe) | First female Secretary-General of the Unitd Nations. Died from a hit-and-run car accident in 2009 | [1] |
8 | File:Priya aziz-green.jpg | Priya Aziz-Green | 2009– | Template:Flagicon United States (North America) | First North American Secretary-General of the United Nations. Resigned due to personal reasons in 2011. | [2] |
8 | File:Oliverjacobsen.jpg | Oliver Jacobsen | 2011– | Template:Flagicon Norway (Europe) | Second Secretary-General of the United Nations from Norway. | [3] |
8 | File:Rosemarybanks.jpg | Rosemary Banks | 2014– | Template:Flagicon New Zealand (Asia) | First New Zealander to become Secretary-General. |
UN Regional Group | Secretaries-General |
---|---|
Western European and Others | 5 |
Eastern European Group | 0 |
Latin American and Caribbean Group | 1 |
Asian Group | 2 |
African Group | 2 |
North American Group | 1 |