Ocnus.Net
How the UN is Faring Under Ban Ki Moon
By Stephen Schlesinger, Huffington 30/6/09
Jun 30, 2009 - 8:07:21 AM
Days after Sri Lanka's government defeated its long-time foe, the Tamil
Tigers, in May, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon flew into
the country's capital, Colombo, for a 24-hour visit to urge its
president to open up its refugee camps to international aid groups.
This was another urgent trip by Ban to a war-torn capital, as part of
his regular duties as the UN's chief representative, seeking to uphold
peace and restore global comity.
But who really knew much about this latest foray into a troubled region
by the UN chief? Not many. Ban, who has just marked the half-way point
in his five-year term in office, has so far been unable to attract a
large worldwide audience for his activities. This is due, in part, to a
stylistic reasons, but also to the vagaries of UN diplomacy.
Still in his quiet way, Ban is spending more than a third of his time
on the road, and has accomplished much over the past 30 months. In
Darfur, he managed to get African Union peacekeepers into Sudan's
killing zone in his first year in office through intensive
behind-the-scenes diplomacy. Though the political process has since
stalled, he has pushed for more peacekeepers and helicopters.
In Kosovo, Ban was able to lower the temperature on the boiling issue
of the province's independence. He persuaded the European Union and the
United States to allow continued UN oversight in Kosovo while gradually
permitting self-governance - all without triggering dangerous
confrontations with the two states which oppose its breakaway, Serbia
and its close ally, Russia.
In Myanmar, despite bitter resistance from the military regime, Ban
pressured the authorities to let in humanitarian aid after Cyclone
Nargis devastated the country last year. His public and private
entreaties, including dozens of phone calls and meetings, saved perhaps
a half-million lives. Today, he continues his call for the release of
the democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi.
In Haiti, which still suffers from underdevelopment, political turmoil,
and the effects of destructive hurricanes, Ban appointed former US
President Bill Clinton as his Special Representative to help deal with
the country's plight. This followed two visits he made to Haiti over
the past 18 months and a donor's conference he sponsored in April that
sought to raise $300 million in aid and investment.
More recently, Ban took an active role in the Gaza crisis. He has
regularly defended the Palestinians' rights to a state, but he also
condemned Hamas's rocket attacks on southern Israel. During the
fighting in Gaza, he publicly demanded a halt to the warfare and
requested that Israel open Gaza's borders to relief aid. He also
visited the UN compound in the center of Gaza to express the UN's grave
concern over its bombing.
Ban has taken a leadership position on the problem of global warming.
He tackled the issue at the Bali Conference of 2007, made it one of his
central concerns at the UN, and will attempt to forge a new agreement
among all global states at the UN Conference in Copenhagen in December
2009.
And he has moved forward in the health field. He accelerated efforts to
eliminate the world's most dangerous ancient scourge, malaria, by
naming a special adviser on the disease, and by forging innovative
partnerships within the UN system that have brought together private
industry, foundations, and non-governmental organizations. His campaign
has already helped to reduce the incidence of malaria.
The problem for Ban is his diffident manner, which stands in stark
contrast with that of his predecessor, Kofi Annan, a larger than life
secretary-general who dominated the scene through his flair, eloquence,
and star power. Ban, by contrast, is neither charismatic nor an
inspirational speaker - indeed, his English is not as good as Annan's.
In his own way, though, he is an engaging, polite man, hip to
contemporary cultural icons, and even given to singing at public
occasions with wry lyrics and verses.
Nonetheless Ban is sometimes criticized for not doing more, not
listening enough, or deferring too much to the Big Five countries on
the Security Council. One of the main complaints is that communicating
with him can be difficult. Ban invariably nods his head in polite
agreement without giving clear guidance. Others say he has yet to prove
he is a good manager and must push harder for internal management
reforms at the UN. Ban, in turn, has openly chastised member states for
not giving him sufficient resources. But, wherever the truth may lie,
few critics take into account that he, like all former UN chief
executives, has to deal with the reality that he possesses only moral
power, not economic, military, or political power.
Still throughout his tenure, Ban has consistently displayed progressive
instincts on issues, despite the fact that his candidacy was originally
championed by an authoritarian Chinese government and a right-wing,
UN-bashing American envoy to the organization, John Bolton. In the end
he should be measured by what he has accomplished rather than by
personal foibles or flatness of style.
Source: Ocnus.net 2009