Historical Figure
Kofi Annan
1938–2018
UN Secretary-General from 1997 to 2006
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"BBC Interview on the Iraq War" — September 16, 2004
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Biography
Kofi Atta Annan was a Ghanaian diplomat and statesman who served as the seventh secretary-general of the United Nations from 1997 to 2006. Annan and the UN were the co-recipients of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize. He was the founder and chairman of the Kofi Annan Foundation, as well as chairman of The Elders, an international organisation founded by Nelson Mandela.
Timeline
The story of Kofi Annan, told in moments.
Born in Kumasi, Gold Coast, now Ghana. He has a twin sister named Efua. Both grandfathers and an uncle are Fante paramount chiefs. His middle name, Atta, means "twin" in Akan. Kofi means "Friday," the day he's born. He attends the elite Mfantsipim boarding school, where he says he learns that "suffering anywhere concerns people everywhere."
Joins the United Nations staff, working first for the WHO in Geneva. Over the next 30 years he rises through the bureaucracy. Manages peacekeeping operations during the Rwandan genocide and the Bosnian War. Both are catastrophic failures of the UN system. He later calls Rwanda his "greatest regret."
Becomes the seventh UN Secretary-General, the first from sub-Saharan Africa and the first elected from the UN staff itself. Reforms the bureaucracy. Launches the Global Compact, the largest corporate sustainability initiative in the world. Pushes HIV/AIDS to the top of the global agenda, especially in Africa.
Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize jointly with the United Nations "for their work for a better organized and more peaceful world." He later faces the Oil-for-Food scandal, which implicates his son Kojo. An independent investigation largely exonerates Kofi of personal corruption but finds management failures.
Appointed UN-Arab League Joint Special Representative for Syria. Produces a six-point peace plan. It fails. He resigns after five months, frustrated with the Security Council's paralysis. "I can't want peace more than the protagonists," he says.
Dies in Bern, Switzerland, at 80. Given a state funeral in Accra attended by heads of state from around the world. He founded the Kofi Annan Foundation to work on international development and conflict resolution. He also chaired The Elders, the group of independent leaders founded by Nelson Mandela.
In Their Own Words (20)
My friends, our challenge today is not to save Western civilization — or Eastern, for that matter. All civilization is at stake, and we can save it only if all peoples join together in the task. You Americans did so much, in the last century, to build an effective multilateral system, with the United Nations at its heart. Do you need it less today, and does it need you less, than 60 years ago? Surely not. More than ever today, Americans, like the rest of humanity, need a functioning global system through which the world’s peoples can face global challenges together. And in order to function more effectively, the system still cries out for far-sighted American leadership, in the Truman tradition. I hope and pray that the American leaders of today, and tomorrow, will provide it.
2006
In today’s world, the security of every one of us is linked to that of everyone else.
2006
We are not only all responsible for each other’s security. We are also, in some measure, responsible for each other’s welfare. Global solidarity is both necessary and possible. — It is necessary because without a measure of solidarity no society can be truly stable, and no one’s prosperity truly secure. That applies to national societies — as all the great industrial democracies learned in the twentieth century — but, it also applies to the increasingly integrated global market economy that we live in today. It is not realistic to think that some people can go on deriving great benefits from globalization while billions of their fellow human beings are left in abject poverty, or even thrown into it. We have to give our fellow citizens, not only within each nation but in the global community, at least a chance to share in our prosperity.
2006
When I look at the murder, rape and starvation to which the people of Darfur are being subjected, I fear that we have not got far beyond “lip service”. The lesson here is that high-sounding doctrines like the “responsibility to protect” will remain pure rhetoric unless and until those with the power to intervene effectively — by exerting political, economic or, in the last resort, military muscle — are prepared to take the lead.
2006
I believe we have a responsibility not only to our contemporaries but also to future generations — a responsibility to preserve resources that belong to them as well as to us, and without which none of us can survive. That means we must do much more, and urgently, to prevent or slow down climate change. Everyday that we do nothing, or too little, imposes higher costs on our children and our children’s children. Of course, it reminds me of an African proverb — the earth is not ours but something we hold in trust for future generations. I hope my generation will be worthy of that trust.
2006
Artifacts (15)
WEAK STATES IN AFRICA-U.S. POLICY OPTIONS IN THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO (IA gov.gpo.fdsys.CHRG-107shrg80845)
Committee on Foreign Relations
THE U.N. OIL FOR FOOD PROGRAM- CASH COW MEETS PAPER TIGER (IA gov.gpo.fdsys.CHRG-108hhrg20052)
Committee on Government Reform
THE IRAQ OIL-FOR-FOOD PROGRAM- STARVING FOR ACCOUNTABILITY (IA gov.gpo.fdsys.CHRG-108hhrg96525)
Committee on Government Reform
A REVIEW OF THE UNITED NATIONS OIL-FOR-FOOD PROGRAM (IA gov.gpo.fdsys.CHRG-108shrg95026)
Committee on Foreign Relations
The social networks of small arms proliferation mapping an aviation enabled supply chain (IA thesocialnetwork109453052)
Curwen, Philip A.
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