António Guterres assumed office on Sunday, Jan. 1, 2017, as
the ninth UN Secretary-General after Ban Ki-moon’s exit following the
completion of a 10 year- tenure on Saturday, Dec. 31.
Guterres, in his maiden message as the UN Secretary-General,
entitled: “Appeal for Peace”, urged the world to make a New Year resolution “to
put peace first”.“On my first day as Secretary-General of the United Nations,
one question weighs heavily on my heart.“How can we help the millions of people caught up in
conflict, suffering massively in wars with no end in sight?
“Civilians are pounded with deadly force. Women, children
and men are killed and injured, forced from their homes, dispossessed and
destitute. Even hospitals and aid convoys are targeted.”
According to him, no one wins these wars rather, everyone
loses.Guterres pointed out that trillions of dollars were spent
destroying societies and economies, fueling cycles of mistrust and fear that
can last for generations.He regretted that whole regions were destabilised adding,
the new threat of global terrorism affects us all.“On this New Year’s Day, I ask all of you to join me in
making one shared New Year’s resolution: Let us resolve to put peace first.“Let us make 2017 a year in which we all – citizens,
governments, leaders strive to overcome our differences.“From solidarity and compassion in our daily lives, to
dialogue and respect across political divides… From ceasefires on the
battlefield, to compromise at the negotiating table to reach political
solutions.Peace must be our goal and our guide,” the new UN scribe
said.
According to him, all that we strive for as a human family dignity and hope, progress and prosperity depends on peace.“But peace depends on us.“I appeal to you all to join me in committing to peace,
today and every day.“Let us make 2017 a year for peace,” Guterres, who will
arrive the UN Headquarters in New York on Tuesday for his first official
working day, appealed.NAN recalls that the new UN chief was sworn in on Dec. 12,
2016 as the ninth Secretary-General.Having witnessed the suffering of the most vulnerable people
on earth, in refugee camps and in war zones, Guterres is determined to make
human dignity the core of his work, and to serve as a peace broker, a
bridge-builder and a promoter of reform and innovation.Prior to his election as Secretary-General, he served as UN
High Commissioner for Refugees from June 2005 to December 2015, heading one of
the world’s foremost humanitarian organisations during some of the most serious
displacement crises in decades.The conflicts in Syria and Iraq, and the crises in South
Sudan, the Central African Republic and Yemen, led to a huge rise in UNHCR’s
activities as the number of people displaced by conflict and persecution rose
from 38 million in 2005 to over 60 million in 2015.Before joining UNHCR, Guterres spent more than 20 years in
government and public service.He served as Prime Minister of Portugal from 1995 to 2002,
during which time he was heavily involved in the international effort to
resolve the crisis in East Timor.As president of the European Council in early 2000, he led
the adoption of the Lisbon Agenda for growth and jobs, and co-chaired the first
European Union-Africa summit.The new secretary-general was a member of the Portuguese
Council of State from 1991 to 2002.Guterres was elected to the Portuguese Parliament in 1976
where he served as a member for 17 years.During that time, he chaired the Parliamentary Committee for
Economy, Finance and Planning, and later the Parliamentary Committee for Territorial
Administration, Municipalities and Environment.The UN scribe was also leader of his party’s parliamentary
group.From 1981 to 1983, Guterres was a member of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, where he chaired the Committee
on Demography, Migration and Refugees.
For many years, the ninth UN scribe was active in the
Socialist International, a worldwide organisation of social democratic
political parties.He was the group’s Vice-President from 1992 to 1999,
co-chairing the African Committee and later the Development Committee, and
served as President from 1999 until mid-2005.
In addition, he founded the Portuguese Refugee Council as
well as the Portuguese Consumers Association DECO, and served as president of
the Centro de Acção Social Universitário, an association carrying out social
development projects in poor neighbourhoods of Lisbon, in the early 1970s.The new UN chief is a member of the Club of Madrid, a
leadership alliance of democratic former presidents and prime ministers from
around the world.
Born in Lisbon in 1949 and graduated from the Instituto
Superior Técnico with a degree in engineering, Guterres is fluent in
Portuguese, English, French and Spanish.
He is married to Catarina de Almeida, Deputy Mayor for
Culture of Lisbon, and has two children, a stepson and three grandchildren.
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