September month to watch in UN race
By Aditi Phadnis
UN Undersecretary-General for Public Information Shashi Tharoor, who
is being backed by India for the post of UN Secretary General, has come
second in the straw poll earlier this week. For a result world capitals
have been waiting for several weeks, the procedure for the straw poll is
surprisingly simple.
Fifteen ambassadors assemble in a room close to the Security Council
chambers, receive a paper ballot each with the names of four potential
candidates. Beside each name are three boxes, one marked "encourage",
the second "discourage", and the third "no opinion." Of the four
candidates, South Korea's Foreign Minister Ban Ki Moon had the most
"encourage" tally.
Ban, a career diplomat who once served at South Korea's UN mission,
received 12 "encourages", one "discourage", and two "no opinions".
Tharoor, a UK-born Indian, received 10 "encourages", two "discourages"
and three "no opinions". The others - Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister
Surakiart Sathirathai and former UN Disarmament Official Jayantha
Dhanapala of Sri Lanka - are so far behind that they are likely to
withdraw from the race. Should we be popping the champagne? Much, much
too early to say, caution UN watchers.
The first straw poll is about the time the Byzantine politics of the
United Nations begins to work and nations began to show their hand, not
hitherto evident. There is talk that former Singaporean Prime Minister
Goh Chok Tong and Jordan's UN Ambassador Prince Zeid al-Hussein might
throw their hat in the ring now. The fact is that history shows that
early entries rarely end up in the secretary-general's chair. In a world
deeply divided over the role, functions and efficacy of the UN, new
alignments will form, edging out old ones because all said and done,
clinching the UN Secretary General post is a matter of national
prestige.
Earlier this week, the US ambassador at the UN, John Bolton, kept US
cards close to his chest. He said any indication from one of the
Security Council's permanent members at this stage could be the kiss of
death. But he suggested that it might be time for other candidates to
enter the fray. In a statement, US President Bush said it was the far
east's turn for a new UN Secretary General. In fact, the negotiations
between China and the US are crucial. Finally, only the P-5 matter in
the selection. The problem is, given the current animus between China
and Japan, getting Japan to agree on a candidate.
UN watchers say a candidate endorsed jointly by the US, China and
Japan would get a lot of purchase on the slippery incline for the job.
But does such a candidate exist ? India is working furiously to get the
three to agree to Tharoor. But there are multilateral and bilateral
angles to this negotiation that are more complex than WTO talks. No one
knows this better than Tharoor.
September is the month to watch. That's when world leaders gather in
New York for the annual General Assembly debate, deals are done and
agreements struck. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has indicated he might
skip the UN General Assembly, instead opting to go to Cuba for the NAM
meeting. But he may have to change his mind.
Courtesy: Business Standard, India |