Tag: Kofi Annan

  • Annan, Adadevoh given ECOWAS award

    The 2018 ECOWAS Prize of Excellence has been posthumously awarded to a former Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan and Dr. Ameyo Adadevoh for their contributions to West Africa’s well-being.

    The prize was presented to representatives of their families at the 55th Summit of the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government yesterday in Abuja.

    The award was also presented to Madam Germaine Acogny, a Senegalese dancer and choreographer responsible for developing African Dance and the creation of several dance schools in France and Senegal.

    The wife of the former UN secretary-general, Nane Annan, the son of Adadevoh, Bankole Cardoso and Acogny received the awards and cash prizes of $20,000, $10,000 and $15,000 each.

    Annan, who died on August 18, 2018 was a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the UN from Jan. 1997 to Dec. 2006.

    He and the UN were the co-recipients of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize and was also the founder and chairman of the Kofi Annan Foundation.

    Annan joined the UN in 1962, working for the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Geneva office.

    He went on to work in several capacities at the UN Headquarters including serving as the Under-Secretary-General for peacekeeping between March 1992 and Dec. 1996.

    He was appointed the Secretary-General on Dec. 13, 1996 by the Security Council, and later confirmed by the General Assembly, making him the first office holder to be elected from the UN staff itself.

    Read Also: ECOWAS to establish migration academy in Nigeria

    He was re-elected for a second term in 2001, and was succeeded as Secretary-General by Ban Ki-moon on Jan. 1, 2007.

    Adadevoh, who was confirmed to test positive for Ebola virus disease on Aug. 4, 2014, and was being treated, died on Aug. 19, 2014.

    She is renowned for her contributions towards curbing the spread of Ebola virus in Nigeria by placing the patient zero, Patrick Sawyer, in quarantine despite pressures from the Liberian government.

    The wife of Annan, who gave an appreciation speech on behalf of the recipients, expressed gratitude to ECOWAS for the award.

    “Thank you for this generous recognition of the immense contribution to the objectives of ECOWAS by my husband and dear friend.

    “I would also like to thank ECOWAS on behalf of the two other laureates, two outstanding women of West Africa, the late Dr Ameyo Adadevoh her selfless sacrifice to curb the spread of Ebola in Nigeria.

    “And Madam Germaine Acogny for the quality and richness of your artistic production,” she said.

    She also said the Kofi Annan Foundation was working with ECOWAS and other partners in West Africa to strengthen democracy and elections, resolve conflicts, support reconciliation and improve food security.

     

  • Kofi Annan: In service of the world

    During his tenure as Secretary General, Kofi Atta Annan frequently reminded the world that “there could be no development without peace, no peace without development, and neither peace nor development without human rights”. That perspective embodied his deep aspirations for global peace and prosperity but, paradoxically, also reflected the bitter lessons of experience learnt in many conflict-afflicted zones in the world, not least the Rwanda and Srebrenica genocides in the 1990s, which occurred during his tenure as the Head of UN Peacekeeping Operations.

    Kofi Annan’s contributions to peace and security were wide ranging: encompassing efforts to discourage needless conflicts, support peace operations, create or nurture institutions for peacebuilding, and develop norms and policies to promote inclusive development.   Annan had presciently opposed U.S. and U.K. 2003 invasion of Iraq. Ahead of the invasion, during a meeting with visiting high-level British officials in New York, Annan was pressed hard to abandon his position and insistence on a Security Council resolution. Annan held his grounds, prompting Adam Thomson, then  United Kingdom’s Deputy Permanent Representative, to quip, “SG, the coalition will proceed with or without U.N. support,” to which Annan retorted: “Ambassador, there comes a time when delusion meets with reality.”

    Today Annan’s position stands vindicated.

    Annan, unlike Boutros Boutros Ghali, was not steeped in African politics, but his commitment to durable peace on the African continent was immense, a fact reflected in his 1998 landmark report on the Causes of Conflict and the Promotion Durable Peace and Sustainable Development in Africa. Annan oversaw the massive peacekeeping deployment in response to rising conflicts in Africa, with about 50 percent (7 of 15) of U.N. peacekeeping operations and about 80 percent of U.N. personnel (69,238 of 87,764) deployed in Africa at the end of his tenure in 2006.  Even after he stepped down as Secretary General, Annan showed his commitment to promoting democracy and good governance in Africa, most notably by mediating between the parties to the post-election violence that erupted in Kenya in 2008. He also pushed hard for political reforms in Zimbabwe, but not regime change sought by Western nations.

    Annan successfully canvassed for “humanitarian intervention”, as a possible preemptive alternative to peacekeeping; though some suspected it was a policy not born of personal  conviction, but as a safeguard against repeat of mistakes such as those in Rwanda and Srebrenica. Annan bought into the concept of “sovereignty as responsibility,” which gained impetus in 2001, well after Nelson Mandela publicly warned his fellow African Heads of State during the 1998 OAU Summit in Ougadougou, Burkina Faso, that “Africa has a right and duty to intervene to root out tyranny.” The resultant policy was the legitimization of the “responsibility to  protect,” which though salutory, had a detracting flipside; most Africans worried that “responsibility to protect” would  give carte blanche to meddlesome global powers.

    Inspired by fundamental principles of the United Nations Charter, in particular the notion of “promoting social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom”, Annan launched a number of human security initiatives to help people stricken by disease, poverty and war. The Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria stands as a testament to his effort to mobilise global response to tackle the scourge of these three diseases around the world. The Millennium Development Goals, agreed at the 2000 Summit, was yet another initiative designed to fight poverty, which was the first of the eight goals. The establishment of the UN Peacebuilding Commission, which creation Annan described as  “filling  the gaping hole,” in the institutional framework for post-conflict reconstruction and development represented an important step in galvanising international support for countries emerging from conflict.

    Annan realised much earlier than many that in an era of globalisation, a strong partnership with private sector was required to make progress on many public policy issues. This provided the impetus for his advancing the idea of  the Global Compact, which aimed to encourage global corporations to embrace principles relating to promotion of labour standards, respect for human rights, protection of the environment, and combating corruption. Annan himself declaimed in a 2000 report that “weaving universal values into the fabric of global markets and corporate practices will help advance broad societal goals while securing open markets”.

    It is broadly acknowledged that “policy is most often limited  less by some objective reality than it is by conceptual barriers of a stateman’s immagination.” The breadth and scope of policy initiatives  launched by Annan  and efforts exerted by him in the area of peace, development and human rights showed that he understood fully the dynamic nexus between these issues. But more importantly, he appreciated that the countries of the world must act in concert to achieve peace and prosperity. It is not for nothing that Annan has been described as a diligent man of peace. It is an accolade well-deserved and affirmed by the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to him in 2001. Yet, when things went wrong – and they did occasionally- and UN member states sought to lay  blame on him, he  was never bashful of self-deprecation; saying often that “SG”, the acronym for his secretary-general title, was a sobriquet for “scapegoat”.

     

    • Otobo is a former director and deputy Head of the UN Peacebuilding Support Office at UN Headquarters in New York, where he acted as Assistant Secretary General from February-August 2009.
    • Obaze served as a UN Official at its headquarters in New York from 1991 to 2012.
  • UN remembers Kofi Annan

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN), Antonio Guterres and staff members, remembered former Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Wednesday, describing him as a leader who put people at the centre of the UN work.

    During a wreath-laying ceremony in New York, Guterres led staff members in paying respects to Annan, whom they described as the embodiment of the intergovernmental organisation that worked to improve the lives of men and women worldwide.

    Kofi Annan died on Saturday at the age of 80 in Switzerland.

    Annan, a mild-mannered diplomat from Ghana, rose through the UN system to become its seventh leader in January 1997, serving two consecutive five-year terms till December 2006.

    “Kofi Annan’s years in office were an exciting time. He put forward new ideas. He brought new people into the United Nations family. He spoke passionately about our mission and role.

    “He created a renewed sense of possibility both inside and outside our organisation about what the UN could do and be for the world’s people.

    “His most defining features were his humanity and solidarity with those in need.

    “He put people at the centre of the work of the United Nations, and was able to turn compassion into action across the UN system,’’ Guterres said.

    He listed some of the actions Annan took to include uniting world leaders to agree global targets on poverty and child mortality – linchpins of the landmark Millennium Development Goals.

    “The former UN chief also joined with civil society and the healthcare injury to save lives from HIV and AIDS.

    “As his successor noted, Annan also did not shy away from addressing challenging issues.

    “Annan faced up to the grave errors made by the United Nations in the 1990s – in its response to the Rwanda genocide and the Srebrenica killings – by shining a light inside the UN.

    “The reports he commissioned aimed to make sure such terrible mistakes are never repeated, and set the international community on a new course in its response to mass atrocities,” Guterres said.

    Guterres stated that the passing of his predecessor was “a personal loss’’ for many who worked in the UN system.

    While the UN flag outside headquarters was flown at half-mast for three days following the announcement of Annan’s death, staff members have been filling a book of condolences with expressions of sympathy to his wife, Nane, and family.

    Many UN personnel also have been sharing their memories of a man who they described as “wise yet humble, courteous and charming’’.

  • Dickson mourns Kofi Annan

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has commiserated with the family of Kofi Annan, United Nations, government and people of Ghana on the death of the former UN secretary-general, who died on Friday at 80.

    Annan was the winner of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize for Humanitarian work. Annan made history when he became the first black secretary general, serving from 1997 to 2006.

    Dickson, in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Francis Ottah Agbo, called on the UN to immortalise the “fallen hero”.

    The statement described the death of the 2001 Nobel laureate as a great loss to humanity. While stressing that Annan was a global citizen, the governor prayed God to grant his soul eternal repose.

    “ On behalf of the government and the good people of Bayelsa State,  I express my condolences to the UN,  the government and people of Ghana as well as the family of Mr. Kofi Annan on the passing of the former secretary general of UN.

    “Annan was forthright, courageous, visionary and intrepid. I remember with nostalgia, how as secretary-general of the United Nations, he championed the clamour for global peace and worthy causes, one of which was  his declaration of American invasion of Iraq in 2003 as “illegal” under international law.

    “Similarly, as UN special envoy to Syria, he proved that he was a principled diplomat. He resigned from his exalted seat when the Syrian government refused to implement his six-point plan towards resolution of the crisis in Syria!

    “Aside diplomacy, Annan was a humanitarian who used the Kofi Annan Foundation to champion Human Rights as well as uplift people across the world.

    “He led a strong crusade against the HIV/AIDS scourge and was instrumental to the establishment of the social investment fund otherwise known as the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Malaria and the launch of the Millennium Development Goals.”

  • ‘Kofi Annan’s death, a loss to International community’

    Delta State Governor, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa has condoled with the Kofi Annan family, the United Nations, the government and people of the Republic of Ghana on the demise of former United Nations Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Atta Annan.

    In a condolence message signed on Saturday by his Chief Press Secretary, Charles Aniagwu, Okowa described the death of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize for humanitarian work winner as “a great loss to the international community where he led efforts to finding peaceful solution to conflicts globally”.

    According to the statement, “We have lost a global statesman who was deeply committed to global peace and conflict resolution. The highly revered diplomat will be long remembered for his towering role and dedication to improving lives through peaceful coexistence among people of diverse race.

    Continuing,”Mr. Annan was bold and fearless as Secretary-General and told truth to power which led to his declaration of American invasion of Iraq in 2003 as “illegal” under international law. As UN Special Envoy to Syria, he proposed a six-point plan, which would have led to the early resolution of the crisis in Syria which was however not implemented by the Syrian government which led to his resignation as Special Envoy”.

    The Governor noted that Annan touched lives with his Kofi Annan Foundation that was committed to overcome threats to peace, development and human rights around the world.

    Read Also: We did not sack Delta Line workers – Okowa

    The statement further read, “On behalf of the government and people of Delta State, Governor Okowa extols Mr. Annan’s extraordinary and committed leadership at the United Nations where he emerged as the first black African to take up the role of the world’s top diplomat, serving from 1997 to 2006 and his exceptional stewardship that led to the successful war against the HIV/AIDS pandemic including the establishment of the social investment fund “The Global Fund” to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria as well as the launching of the Millennium Development Goals.”

    Okowa expressed the hope that the international community and all those who mourn the late Kofi Annan will continue to honour his legacy of selfless service and commitment to human dignity and global peace.

    He prayed God to grant his soul eternal rest and comfort his family, well-wishers and the people of the Republic of Ghana in this period of loss and global mourning.

     

  • Buhari mourns Kofi Annan

    President Muhammadu Buhari has commiserated with the government and people of Ghana over the passing of former United Nations (UN) Secretary General, Kofi Annan, in the early hours of Saturday 18th August, 2018.

    President Buhari, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Femi Adesina, had called President Nana Akufo-Addo of Ghana from London.

    He told the Ghanaian President that all Nigerians and ECOWAS member countries share in the deep loss, considering the strategic influence of the former scribe in global affairs and his vision for the repositioning of the West Coast and Africa.

    As the first elected staff of the United Nations to lead the world organisation and first African to win the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize jointly with the United Nations, the President noted that Annan’s humility, nobility and love for humanity set him apart for global greatness, achieving  recognition and commendation for the reform of the United Nations’ bureaucracy and multiple interventions to bring peace to the world.

    Read Also: Kofi Annan is dead

    He said Annan’s origin and home will always be traced to Ghana, but his exceptional leadership roles, humanitarian spirit and contributions to global peace and development will remain indelible in the history of the entire world, especially the efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in Africa and launch of the UN Global Compact.

    The President also sent condolences to the wife of the diplomat, Nane Maria Annan and his family members, staff of the United Nations and the global organisations he was heading, like The Elders, which was founded by Nelson Mandela.

    Buhari prayed that the Almighty God will comfort his family and all his loved ones.

  • Let’s stop violence against women today

    Let’s stop violence against women today

    The world we live in is satiated with various malevolent practices; one of which is violence.

    Violence against women is regarded a hard crime propelled by bias.

    According to Kofi Annan, the Secretary General of United Nations ( UN ) in 2006, “violence against women and girls is a problem of pandemic proportions.”

    At least one out of every three women around the world has been beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in their lifetime with the abuser usually someone known to her.

    Women all over the world are victims of various kinds of violent treatment from the society, especially men.

    Categories of violence against women include rape, domestic violence, sexual harassment, female infanticide (which involves the deliberate killing of female newborns), Female Genital Mutilation (FGM)- Female circumcision.

    Other forms include marriage by abduction, honour killing, sexual slavery forced prostitution and women trafficking.

    Sexual harassment is the cohesion of a sexual nature.

    It involves unwelcome sexual advances, request for sexual favours, verbal or physical harassment.

    Though there are laws against sexual harassment, but these laws do not forbid offhand comments or simple teasing.

    The International day for the elimination of violence against women was designated by UN on 17th December 1999,

    in honour of the Mirabal sisters.

    The Mirabal sisters – Patria Mercedes Mirabal Reyes,

    María Argentina Minerva Mirabal Reyes and Antonia Maria Teresa Mirabal Reyes were from the Republic of Dominican.

    They stood to oppose the dictatorship of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo (the Dominican dictator at that time).

    They were involved in secretive activities against his regime.

    All three of them were assassinated on their way home by Trujillo’s henchmen on November 25, 1960.

    Their demise became symbols of popular and feminist resistance.

    So in 1999, United Nations General Assembly chose November 25 to be the International day for the elimination of violence against women, with Phumzile Mlambo Ngcuka as the Executive Director of UN women.

    This day is celebrated annually worldwide.

    This movement started with the aim of raising awareness that women all over the globe are subject to all forms of violent practices; this is a pointer to the fact that the scale and true nature of the issue is often hidden.

    Some people believe that women should not do some kind of jobs because they are women (gender inequality). In fact, some totally go against women having a say in their homes or choosing who they want to spend the rest of their lives with (forced marriage).

    Others see them as punching bags that are readily available for them to vent their anger (domestic violence).

    This is why we should all arise to fight against this menace that it eating deep into our societies.

    Cases of domestic violence, rape and the likes should have weighty penalties which would serve as a lesson to others.

    It starts with you, whoever you are, wherever you may be, support the elimination of violence against our mothers, our sisters, our daughters and friends and the world be a better place to live in.

    Orange your world!

  • When politicians go gaga

    When politicians go gaga

    IR: Nigerian politics and politicians are peculiar;  comparatively different from other westen democratic political processes. Their style remind of the award-winning play – Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again by Ola Rotimi, a comic swipe at ideological misfits and opportunists who strut over the ever-accommondating political landscape of contemporary Africa.

    Those who fail to learn from history are bound to perish in the pitfall of the past generations. Our politicians have shown that they have learnt nothing and forgotten nothing by their daily activities and behaviour.

    Professor Bolaji Akinyemi once alerted the nation that the way and manners the two political parties at the forefront of the political contest were going about the race for power is becoming frightening and that whichever of the two that may eventually win could cause violence in the land. Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary General and other great world leaders intervened and caused a peace accord to be signed; little did we know that it was a mere paper work that would not stop violence in our polity. From Lagos, Kano, Gombe, Ekiti, to Rivers, it has been violence all the way. The latest took place in Okirika Local Government Area in River State, where the campaign rally of APC gubernatorial candidate was terminated with rain of bullets by unknown political thugs. A policeman was reportedly killed and 50 others injured despite the guarantee the party received from the Police Commisioner.

    The president has not condemned the attack at Okirika. Tension is on the rise daily, but are there no beautiful ones among the political groups that should call for time to heal the wounds, to bridge the chasms that divide the nation in order to build a better and new nation?

    The daily pebbles of insultive words at political opponents cannot win an election; it will only inflame the volatile political atmosphere. It is time to call Ayo Fayose, Femi Fani-Kayode and their likes to the banquet of love and peace. Never before have we descended to gutter levels as we have these days, when the very people aspiring for leadership cannot console broken hearted youths with words of hope. Instead of providing the youths with empowerment programmes as it is being done in Osun under the leadership of Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, who within four years has gainfully employed and empowered over 60, 000 youths; a phenomenal scheme that has received World Bank and international admiration, some feel the best they could do for the jobless youths is to engage them as political thugs, armed them to maim and kill political opponents.

    Any government which lay claim to legitimacy is expected to ensure there is a measure of social welfare for its citizens; guarantee their security irrespective of social status and religious beliefs. It is just and right that people’s right to freely choose the type of leaders they want is guaranteed. That is the more reason, President Jonathan must allow the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC ) to perform its duties as electoral umpire.

    The military need not be told that their duty is to protect the nation from external attacks, while the internal security of the country lies with the police as provided for in the constitution. Leaders go, leaders come but the nation must continue to exist. We must prove to the world that we have come of age to conduct our affairs without any bloodshed. We must tell the all powerful AIG Joseph Mbu that in a democratic society, a suspect is presumed innocent untill the court says otherwise. Nigerians are saying no to shoot  at sight or “ kill 20 men that kill a single policeman”.

    •Yomi Obaditan,

    Osogbo, Osun State.

     

  • West Africa must confront weaknesses to curb drugs trade – Obasanjo

    West Africa must confront weaknesses to curb drugs trade – Obasanjo

    West Africa must openly confront its political and governance weaknesses to curb the growing drug trade in the region, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said.

    “West Africa is no longer only a transit zone of drugs but an attractive destination where pushers take advantage of the weak political system to perpetuate their trade,” Reuters quoted Obasanjo, who chairs the West Africa Commission on Drugs (WACD), as saying while presenting his report to Ghana’s President John Mahama.

    “We believe that we should confront openly the political and governance weaknesses which the traffickers exploit,” the former Nigerian leader added.

    Former United Nations chief, Kofi Annan, set up the commission last year to explore ways to stem the increasing trafficking of drugs and its use in the region.

    West Africa has long produced and consumed cannabis but its collection of weak states has over the last decade become a major transit zone for Latin American cocaine destined for Europe. Heroin from Asia is also passing through the region.

    Drugs are undermining the stability of West African countries and their development, “eating not only into the normal life of our youth, but it’s eating into our political system and governance,” Obasanjo said.

    In its report released in June, the commission called on governments in West Africa to decriminalise drug use and treat the issue as a health problem.

    Obasanjo said because of the amount of money involved, “drug barons can buy, they can do, and they can undo – buy officials in the military, security and pervert justice.”

    Annan said wrong-headed governmental policies by leaders and influential people in society have destroyed many more lives in West Africa than drug use.

    WACD has 11 members including former President Pedro Pires of Cape Verde and former Togolese Prime Minister Edem Kojo.