NEW YORK
Antonio Guterres was unanimously elected ninth secretary-general of the United Nations Thursday. The Security Council’s choice for the new head of the global body became clear last week when Guterres survived the last of a series of straw polls with no permanent member voting against him.
The 67-year-old former Portuguese premier will succeed the South Korean diplomat on Jan. 1, after running a public campaign for the UN’s top post beginning in July, which marks a break from a traditionally secretive election process.
The former head of the UN refugee agency from Portugal has been the front-runner to take the helm after Ban Ki-moon’s second five-year tenure ends at the end of the year.
In an address to the General Assembly, Ban praised member states “not only for their choice, but for the way in which they went about it”.
“The first-ever public hearings on the selection of a secretary-general opened the process to the world,” he said.
Regarding his successor, he said: “Secretary-General-designate Guterres is well known to all of us in the hall. But he is perhaps best known where it counts most: on the frontlines of armed conflict and humanitarian suffering.
“For the past decade, the work of the United Nations high commissioner for refugees and other humanitarian actors has been a lifeline for millions upon millions of people forced from their homes.”