Kofi Atta Annan, Honorary GCMG (born 8
April 1938) is a Ghanaian
diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the
United Nations from 1 January 1997 to
1 January 2007. Annan and the United Nations were the
co-recipients of the 2001
Nobel Peace
Prize.
Early years and family
Kofi Annan
was born in the Kofandros section of Kumasi
, Ghana
– in what
was then the British colony of the Gold Coast. He is a
twin, a respected status in
Ghanaian culture. His twin sister Efua
Atta, who died in 1991, shares the middle name 'Atta', which in
Fante and
Akan means 'twin'.
Annan's family was part of the country's elite; both of his
grandfathers and his uncle were tribal chiefs. His father was
half-Ashanti, half-Fante, and his mother a Fante.
Annan is married to Nane Maria Annan, née Lagergren, a Swedish
lawyer and artist who is the half-niece of
Raoul Wallenberg.
He has two children,
Kojo and Ama, from his previous marriage
to Titi Alakija, a Nigerian
, whom he
divorced in the late 1970s. Annan also has one stepchild,
Nina Cronstedt de Groot, Nane's daughter from a previous marriage.
Name
In the Ghanaian tradition, children are named according to the day
of the week on which they were born. Kofi in Akan is the name that
corresponds with Friday.
In his earlier years at the UN, Annan's last name had widely been
mispronounced as rhyming with "anon"; Annan has let it be known
that he rhymes his name with "cannon".
Education
From 1954
to 1957, Annan attended the elite Mfantsipim school, a Methodist boarding
school in Cape
Coast
founded in the 1870s. Annan has said that
the school taught him "that suffering anywhere concerns people
everywhere". In 1957, the year Annan graduated from Mfantsipim,
Ghana gained independence from Britain.
In 1958,
Annan began studying for a degree in
economics at the Kumasi College of Science
and Technology, now the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology of Ghana
. He received a Ford
Foundation grant, enabling him to complete his undergraduate
studies at Macalester
College
in St. Paul
, Minnesota
, United States, in 1961. Annan then did a
DEA degree in
International Relations at the Graduate Institute
of International Studies (Institut universitaire des hautes
études internationales IUHEI) in Geneva
, Switzerland, from 1961–62, later attending the
MIT Sloan
School of Management
(1971–72) Sloan
Fellows program and receiving a Master of Science (M.S.)
degree.
Annan is fluent in English, French,
Kru, other dialects of
Akan, and other
African languages.
Early career
In 1962, Annan started working as a Budget Officer for the
World Health Organization, an
agency of the United Nations. From 1974 to 1976, he worked as the
Director of
Tourism in Ghana. Annan then
returned to work for the United Nations as an Assistant
Secretary-General in three consecutive positions: Human Resources,
Management and Security Coordinator, from 1987 to 1990; Program
Planning, Budget and Finance, and Controller, from 1990 to 1992;
and Peacekeeping Operations, from March 1993 to February
1994.
The
Rwandan Genocide took place
while Annan was in charge of UN Peacekeeping Operations.In his book
Shake Hands with
the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda, Canadian
ex-General
Roméo Dallaire, who
was force commander of the
United Nations
Assistance Mission for Rwanda, claims that Annan was overly
passive in his response to the incipient genocide. General Dallaire
explicitly asserts that Annan held back U.N. troops from
intervening to settle the conflict, and from providing more
logistical and material support. In particular, Dallaire claims
that Annan failed to provide any responses to his repeated faxes
asking him for access to a weapons depository, something that could
have helped defend the endangered
Tutsis. Ten
years after the genocide, in which an estimated 800,000 people were
killed, Annan admitted "I could and should have done more to sound
the alarm and rally support."
Annan
served as Under-Secretary-General until October 1995, when he was
made a Special Representative of the Secretary-General to the
former Yugoslavia
, serving for five months in that capacity before
returning to his duties as Under-Secretary-General in April
1996.
Secretary-General of the United Nations
Appointment
On 13
December 1996, Annan was recommended by the United Nations Security
Council to replace the previous Secretary-General, Dr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt
, whose
second term faced the veto of the United States. He was
confirmed four days later by the vote of the
General Assembly, and he
started his first term as Secretary-General on 1 January
1997.
Activities
Mark Malloch Brown succeeded
Louise Frechette as Annan's Deputy
Secretary-General in April 2004.
In April 2001, he issued a five-point "Call to Action" to address
the
HIV/
AIDS pandemic. As Secretary-General, Annan saw this
pandemic as a "personal priority" and proposed the establishment of
a
Global AIDS and Health
Fund in an attempt to stimulate the increased spending needed
to help developing countries confront the HIV/AIDS crisis.
On 10 December 2001, Annan and the United Nations were jointly
awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize,
"for their work for a better organized and more peaceful
world".
During the build-up to the
2003
invasion of Iraq, Annan called on the United States and the
United Kingdom not to invade without the support of the United
Nations. In a September 2004 interview on the
BBC, Annan was asked about the legal authority for the
invasion, and responded, "from
our point of view,
from the
charter point of
view it was illegal."
Annan
supported sending a UN peacekeeping mission to
Darfur, Sudan
, and worked
with the government of Sudan to accept a transfer of power from the
African Union peacekeeping mission to a UN
one. Annan also worked with several
Arab
and
Muslim countries on
women's rights and other topics.
Beginning in 1998 Annan convened an annual UN
Security Council
Retreat with 15 States representatives of the Council at the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund
(RBF) Conference Center at the
Rockefeller family estate at Pocantico,
which was sponsored by both the RBF and the UN. He and his wife
also attended the Playhouse at the family estate on the occasion of
Brooke Astor's 100th birthday
celebration.
He is a strong supporter and guest of the
family's Asia
Society
in New York.
Lubbers sexual-harassment investigation
In June 2004, Annan was given a copy of the
Office
of Internal Oversight Services report on the complaint of
sexual harassment, abuse of
authority, and retaliation against
Ruud
Lubbers,
UN High Commissioner
for Refugees. The report also discussed allegations of sexual
harassment and misconduct against Werner Blatter, Director of UNHCR
Personnel, by a long-serving staff member. The investigation report
found Ruud Lubbers guilty of sexual harassment and no mention was
made publicly of the other charge against a senior official or the
two subsequent complaints she filed later that year. In the course
of the official investigation, Lubbers wrote a letter that some
speculate was a threat to the female worker who had brought the
charges of misconduct. However, on 15 July 2004, Lubbers was
declared innocent by Kofi Annan. His decision only lasted until
November when OIOS issued its annual report to the UN General
Assembly noting it has found Lubbers guilty. Widely reported in the
media, these events served to weaken Annan's position.
On 17 November 2004, Annan accepted a report clearing UN
Under-Secretary-General for Internal Oversight Services
Dileep Nair of
political corruption and sexual
harassment charges — charges which some viewed as retaliation
against Nair for supporting the complainant in the Lubbers affair .
However, clearance was not viewed favorably by some UN staff in New
York, leading to extensive debate on 19 November. In February 2005,
Lubbers resigned as head of the UN refugee agency.
Oil-for-Food scandal
In
December 2004, reports surfaced that the Secretary-General's son
Kojo received payments from the Swiss
company
Cotecna Inspection SA, which
won a lucrative contract under the UN Oil-for-Food Program. Kofi Annan
called for an investigation into this matter.
The Independent Inquiry Committee into The United Nations
Oil-for-Food Program was appointed by Annan and led by former US
Federal Reserve Chairman
Paul Volcker;,
the director of the
United
Nations Association of the United States of America. In his
first interview with the Inquiry Committee, Annan denied having had
a meeting with Cotecna. Later in the inquiry he recalled that he
had met with Cotecna's chief executive Elie-Georges Massey twice.
In a final report issued on 27 October, the committee found
insufficient evidence to indict Kofi Annan on any illegal actions,
but did find fault with Mr. Benan Sevan, a Cypriot national who had
worked for the UN for about 40 years. Appointed to his Oil-For-Food
role by Kofi Annan, Mr. Sevan repeatedly asked Iraqis for
allocations of oil to the African Middle East Petroleum Company.
Sevan's behavior was "ethically improper", Volcker said to
reporters. Sevan for his part, has repeatedly denied the charges
and argues that he is being made a "scapegoat". The Volcker report
was also highly critical of the UN management structure and the
Security Council oversight and strongly recommended a new position
of Chief Operating Officer to handle the fiscal and administrative
responsibilities which currently fall to the Secretary General's
office. The report listed the companies, both Western and
Middle Eastern, who illegally benefited from the
program.
Conflict between the United States and the United Nations
Kofi Annan supported his deputy Secretary-General
Mark Malloch Brown,
who openly criticized segments of the United States media in a
speech on 6 June 2006: "[T]he prevailing practice of seeking to use
the UN almost by stealth as a diplomatic tool while failing to
stand up for it against its domestic critics is simply not
sustainable. You will lose the UN one way or another. [...] [That]
the US is constructively engaged with the UN [...] is not well
known or understood, in part because much of the public discourse
that reaches the US heartland has been largely abandoned to its
loudest detractors such as
Rush
Limbaugh and
Fox News." The interim
U.S. ambassador
John R. Bolton was reported to have told Annan on the
phone: "I've known you since 1989 and I'm telling you this is the
worst mistake by a senior UN official that I have seen in that
entire time." At the end of Kofi Annan's tenure as Secretary
General, Bolton was asked to sum up Annan's years at the UN. He
responded simply: "I'll pass."
UN Resolution 61/225: World Diabetes Day
Kofi Annan was the overseeing Secretary-General of the United
Nations General Assembly during the successful passing (
by
consensus) of UN Resolution 61/225 -
World Diabetes Day. The
Resolution was, and still remains, the second-ever UN General
Assembly Resolution on any health-related issue (the other being
HIV/AIDS). However, 61/225 remains the only Health-related UN
Resolution to ever pass by consensus.
The
Resolution was sponsored by the Republic of South Africa and
Bangladesh
, and was passed on 20 December 2006.
Farewell addresses
On 19
September 2006, Annan gave a farewell address to world leaders
gathered at the UN headquarters
in New York, in anticipation of his retirement on
31 December. In the speech he outlined three major problems
of "an unjust world economy, world disorder, and widespread
contempt for
human rights and the rule
of law", which he believes "have not resolved, but sharpened"
during his time as Secretary-General. He also pointed to violence
in Africa, and the
Arab-Israeli
conflict as two major issues warranting attention.
On 11
December 2006, in his final speech as Secretary-General, delivered
at the Harry S.
Truman Presidential Library
in Independence
, Missouri
, Annan recalled Truman's leadership in the founding of the
United Nations. He called for the United States to return to
President Truman's
multilateralist
foreign policies, and to follow Truman's credo that "the
responsibility of the great states is to serve and not dominate the
peoples of the world". He also said that the United States must
maintain its commitment to human rights, "including in the struggle
against terrorism."
Recommendations for UN reform
After years of research, Annan presented a progress report,
In Larger Freedom, to the
UN General Assembly, on 21 March 2005. Annan recommended Security
Council expansion and a host of other
UN reform.
On 31 January 2006, Kofi Annan outlined his vision for a
comprehensive and extensive reform of the UN in a policy speech to
the
United Nations
Association UK.
The speech, delivered at Central
Hall
, Westminster
, also marked the 60th Anniversary of the first
meetings of the UN
General Assembly and UN Security
Council.
On 7 March 2006, he presented to the General Assembly his proposals
for a fundamental overhaul of the United Nations Secretariat. The
reform report is entitled: "
Investing
in the United Nations, For a Stronger Organization
Worldwide".
On 30 March 2006, he presented to the General Assembly his analysis
and recommendations for updating the entire work programme of the
United Nations Secretariat over the last 60 years. The report is
entitled: "Mandating and Delivering: Analysis and Recommendations
to Facilitate the Review of Mandates".
Post-UN career
Upon his return to Ghana, Annan was immediately suggested as a
candidate to become the country's next
head of state.
He has become involved with several organizations with both global
and African focuses. In 2007, Annan was named chairman of the prize
committee for the
Mo Ibrahim Prize for
Achievement in African Leadership, was chosen to lead the new
formation of Alliance for a
Green
Revolution in Africa (AGRA), became a member of the
Global Elders, was appointed president of the
Global Humanitarian Forum
in Geneva, and was selected for the
MacArthur Foundation Award for
International Justice.
In the beginning of 2008, as head of the Panel of Eminent African
Personalities, Annan participated in the negotiations to end the
civil
unrest in Kenya. He threatened to leave the negotiations as
mediator if a quick decision was not made. On 26 February 2008 he
suspended talks to end Kenya's violent post-election crisis. On 28
February, Annan managed to have President
Mwai Kibaki and
Raila
Odinga sign a coalition government agreement and was widely
lauded by many Kenyans for this landmark achievement. That was the
best deal achieved then under the mediation efforts.
Annan currently serves on the board of directors of the
United Nations Foundation, a
public charity created in 1998 with
entrepreneur and
philanthropist Ted
Turner’s historic $1 billion USD gift to support UN causes. The
UN Foundation builds and implements public-private partnerships to
address the world’s most pressing problems, and broadens support
for the UN.
Annan is a member of the
Africa
Progress Panel (APP), an independent authority on Africa
launched in April 2007 to focus world leaders’ attention on
delivering their commitments to the continent. The Panel launched a
major report in London on Monday 16 June 2008 entitled
Africa's
Development: Promises and Prospects.
Kofi
Annan was appointed the Chancellor of the University
of Ghana
in 2008.
Annan has signed up to be one of the Counsellors at
One Young World a non-profit organisation
which hopes to bring together 1500 young global leaders of tomorrow
from every country in the world.
In May 2009
Columbia University
announced that Annan will join a new program being launched by Dean
John Coatsworth at the School of
International and Public Affairs as one of the first group of
Global Fellows.The Global Fellows program will bring students
together with global practitioners to share firsthand knowledge of
experiences in the life of an international or public figure. He is
also a fellow of The Committee on Global Thought appointed by the
University.
On 2
September 2009, Annan was unveiled as the first Li Ka Shing
Professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of
Public Policy of the National
University of Singapore
(NUS). The announcement was made during the
school's 5th anniversary celebrations.
Mr. Annan is expected to be among the special guests, including
Pete Postlethwaite and
Gillian Anderson and
Thom Yorke of
Radiohead
(singing live) at the global live premier of
The Age of Stupid.
Honours
- Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology
, (Kumasi), Honorary Doctor of Science, 24 August
1998
- United
Nations Mandated University for Peace, Honorary President,
1999
- Lund University
, Honorary Doctor of Law, 1999
- National University
of Ireland, Doctor of Law, 22 January 1999
- Technische
Universität Dresden
, doctor honoris causa, 27 April
1999
- Howard University
, honorary doctorate of humane letters, 8 May
1999
- University of Notre Dame
, Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, 21 May
2000
- Seton Hall University
,
John C.
Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Relations,
Honorary Doctorate, February 2001
- Brown University
, Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, 28 May
2001
- Liberty Medal International
Selection Commission, Liberty Medal, 4 July 2001
- Free University of Berlin
, doctor honoris causa, 13 July
2001
- Nobel Foundation, The Nobel
Peace Prize, jointly presented to Kofi Annan and the United
Nations, 2001
- Tilburg University
, Honorary Doctorate, 2002
- Northwestern University
, Doctor of Laws, 21 June 2002
- 2002 winner of the "Profiles in Courage Award," given
by the JFK Memorial Museum.
- University of Pittsburgh
, honorary Doctor of Public and International
Affairs degree 21 October 2003
- Ghent University
(Belgium), doctor honoris causa 21 March
2003
- Carleton University
, Legum Doctor, honoris causa, 9 March
2004
- University of Ottawa
, Doctor of the University Degree, 9 March
2004
- University of Pennsylvania
, Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, 16 May
2005
- Grand Collar of the Order of
Liberty (Portugal), 11 October 2005
- Universidade Nova de
Lisboa, doctor honoris causa, 12 October 2005
- The George Washington
University
, Doctor of Public Service, 5 May 2006
- University of Tokyo
, Honorary Doctorate, 18 May 2006
- Order of the
Netherlands Lion, Knight Grand Cross, 2006
- Georgetown University
, Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa,
30 October 2006
- University of St. Gallen
, Switzerland, Max Schmidheiny Foundation Freedom
Prize (originally awarded 2003, but postponed due to Annan's
illness), 18 November 2006
- Princeton University
, Crystal Tiger Award, 28 November 2006
- Inter Press Service,
International Achievement Award for Annan's lasting
contributions to peace, security, and development, 19 December
2006
- Olof Palme Prize, 2006
- Honorary Knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II (GCMG), 2007.
- MacArthur
Foundation, MacArthur Award for International Justice
- King's College London
, Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, 28 May
2008
- North-South Prize of the
Council of Europe 2007
- Peace of Westphalia
Prize 2008
- Havard university
Honors Prize 29 January 2008
See also
References
- Kofi Annan - The Man To Save The World? Saga
Magazine, November 2002
- [1]
- Kofi Annan - Center of the Storm. Life Map. A Chief's
Son PBS
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3573229.stm
- Annan Clears Refugee Chief Of Harassment
Accusations
- UN refugee chief quits over sex claims(February
21, 2005) www.theage.com.au
- Annan Backs Deputy in Dispute With U.S.
- "Iraq Study Group's Suggestion That U.S. Engage
Iran And Syria In Talks About Iraq Leads To More Debate Than
Resolve, In Washington And Iraq" - CNN NEWSROOM Transcripts
(Aired December 11, 2006 - 09:00ET)
- Annan 'for president': Africa: News:
News24
- Annan: Kenya factions 'not capable' of agreement -
CNN.com
- Annan suspends Kenya's post-election talks -
CNN.com
- United Nations Foundation Board of Directors
- APP, Press Release: Africa Progress Panel demands action on
global food crisis “reversing decades of economic progress”, 16
June 2008,
http://www.africaprogresspanel.org/english/newsreleases.php
- Kofi Annan joins LKY school. The Straits Times Online. 3
September 2009[2]
External links
Biographies, interviews, and profiles
Articles
- Ian Williams, The
Guardian, 20 September 2005, "Annan has paid his dues: The UN declaration of a
right to protect people from their governments is a millennial
change"
- Annan, Kofi A. "Lessons from the U.N. leader" The Washington
Post, Dec 12, 2006.
- "Kofi and U.N. Ideals" The Wall Street Journal, Dec 14,
2006.
- Colum Lynch, The Washington
Post, 24 April 2005, "U.N. Chief's Record Comes Under Fire"
- [2381]
Speeches