Ban Ki-Moon, Zuid-Koreaanse staatsman en secretaris-generaal van de Verenigde Naties
Ban Ki-Moon, Zuid-Koreaanse staatsman en secretaris-generaal van de Verenigde Naties
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Ban Ki-Moon, (geboren 13 juni 1944, Ŭmsŏng, door Japan bezet Korea [nu in Zuid-Korea]), Zuid-Koreaanse diplomaat en politicus, die de achtste secretaris-generaal (2007–16) van de Verenigde Naties was (VN).

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Op 18-jarige leeftijd won Ban een wedstrijd die hem naar het Witte Huis bracht om de Amerikaanse president te ontmoeten. John F. Kennedy, een bezoek dat volgens Ban zijn openbare carrière inspireerde. Hij behaalde een bachelordiploma (1970) in internationale betrekkingen aan de Seoul National University en behaalde een masterdiploma (1985) aan de John F. Kennedy School of Government aan de Harvard University. Nadat hij in 1970 de buitenlandse dienst van Zuid-Korea was binnengekomen, was hij adviseur van de ambassade in Washington, DC (1987-1990), directeur Amerikaanse zaken bij het ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken (1990-1992), vice-minister van Buitenlandse Zaken (1995-1996), en nationale veiligheidsadviseur van de president (1996-1998). Na een periode als ambassadeur in Oostenrijk (1998-2000), keerde Ban terug naar Seoul als vice-minister van Buitenlandse Zaken (2000-2001). In 2003 werd hij adviseur buitenlands beleid van de nieuwe president, Roh Moo Hyun.Als minister van Buitenlandse Zaken en Handel van 2004 tot 2006 speelde Ban een sleutelrol in de zespartijenoverleg die gericht was op het denucleariseren van Noord-Korea.

Ban’s UN experience began in 1975 when he became a staff member of the UN division of the Foreign Ministry in Seoul. In the late 1970s, when South Korea had only observer status, Ban was posted to the South Korean mission to the UN. In 1999 he served as chairman of the preparatory commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization. Ban also led the cabinet of the president of the UN General Assembly during South Korea’s tenure of the rotating presidency in 2001–02, the critical period following the terrorist attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001 (see September 11 attacks).

On October 13, 2006, just days after North Korea tested a nuclear weapon, Ban was named UN secretary-general-elect. Though Ban’s quiet demeanour led some observers to question his ability to take on the daunting challenges facing the UN, others characterized him as an astute consensus builder who would be able to work effectively with both the Americans and the Chinese. Ban succeeded Kofi Annan on January 1, 2007, becoming the first Asian to serve as UN secretary-general since Burmese statesman U Thant held the office (1962–71). Ban faced a number of challenges, including the North Korean and Iranian nuclear threats, troubles in the Middle East, and the humanitarian crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan. Reform of the UN itself was also a major issue. In 2011 Ban was elected to a second term.

His second term saw Ban deal with a number of crises, particularly in the Middle East, such as the Syrian Civil War and fallout from the various movements of the Arab Spring. In addition, he had to cope with the international turmoil over Russia’s forcible annexation of the Ukrainian autonomous republic of Crimea in 2014. The responses that the UN made to those crises were often criticized as being too slow or ineffectual, and his second term as secretary-general was widely perceived as having been far less successful than his first when it ended on December 31, 2016.

In 2017 Ban became chair of the International Olympic Committee’s Ethics Commission. The following year he cofounded the Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens.