Clark, Cartwright in Line to Replace Kofi Anna (NBR.co.nz)
4 January 2006
International women's rights organisation
Equality Now is lobbying for a woman to replace out-going UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan -- and two prominent New Zealand women, Helen Clark and Silvia Cartwright, are
high on their list of proposed candidates.
Speculation has swirled for more than a year that Helen Clark hopes for a top UN post when she exits her role as Prime Minister, although few would have thought she had the props for the top UN job.
But Equality Now names her -- and Governor-General Silvia Cartwright -- among 18 women it says are all qualified to take over the helm at the UN.
The 18 women named are a representative sample of the talent pool available, the group says, and none of them have indicated they are in the running for the job.
The group says it is time for a woman to lead the organisation after sixty years of institutional life and notes that women generally do not fare well in the upper reaches of the UN career tree.
"As of 30 June 2005, women occupied only 37.1 per cent of professional and higher positions and only 16.2 per cent of the Under-Secretaries General were women. Women’s unequal access to positions of decision-making power around the world hinders progress toward all the United Nations’ goals, including equality, development and peace," the group says.
Mr Annan is scheduled to step down toward the end of the year but some speculation is building that he may choose an early exit.
According to
Times Online, much of the talk of an early departure stems from John Bolton having told fellow diplomats that he wants to settle on a successor by July.
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