Former U.N. Secretary-General led world through turbulent times
ACCRA, GHANA
Kofi Annan, a charismatic global diplomat and the first black African to become United Nations secretary-general — who led the world body through one of its most turbulent periods — died early Saturday at age 80.
Tributes flowed in from around the world after his foundation announced his death in the Swiss capital, Bern, after a short and unspecified illness. The statement remembered the Nobel Peace Prize winner as “radiating genuine kindness, warmth and brilliance in all he did.”
He died “peacefully in his sleep,” the president of Ghana, where Annan was born, said after speaking to his wife.
At U.N. headquarters in New York, the U.N. flag flew at half-staff and a bouquet of flowers was placed under Annan’s portrait. Reflecting the widespread regard that won him a groundbreaking uncontested election to a second term, leaders from Russia, India, Israel,
France and elsewhere expressed condolences for a man Bill Gates called “one of the great peacemakers of our time.”
Annan spent virtually his entire career as an administrator in the United Nations. His aristocratic style, cool-tempered elegance and political savvy helped guide his ascent to become its seventh secretary-general, and the first hired from within. His two terms were from Jan. 1, 1997, to Dec. 31, 2006, capped nearly midway when he and the U.N. were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001.
During his tenure, Annan presided over some of the worst failures and scandals at the world body. Challenges from the outset forced him to spend much of his time struggling to restore its tarnished reputation.
His enduring moral prestige remained largely undented, however, both through charm and by virtue of having negotiated with most of the powers in the world.
When he departed from the United Nations, he left behind a global organization far more aggressively engaged in peacekeeping and fighting poverty, setting the framework for its 21st-century response to mass atrocities and its emphasis on human rights and development.
“In many ways, Kofi Annan was the United Nations,” current U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said. “He rose through the ranks to lead the organization into the new millennium with matchless dignity and determination.”
Even out of office, Annan never completely left the U.N. orbit. He returned in special roles, including as the U.N.-Arab League’s special envoy to Syria in 2012. He remained a powerful advocate for global causes through his eponymous foundation.
Annan took on the top U.N. post six years after the collapse of the Soviet Union and presided during a decade when the world united against terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks — then divided deeply over the U.S.-led war against Iraq. The U.S. relationship tested him as a world diplomatic leader.
“I think that my darkest moment was the Iraq war, and the fact that we could not stop it,” Annan said in a February 2013 interview with TIME magazine to mark the publication of his memoir, “Interventions: A Life in War and Peace.”
Despite his well-honed diplomatic skills, Annan was never afraid to speak candidly. That didn’t always win him fans, particularly in the case of Bush’s administration, with whom Annan’s camp spent much time bickering. Much of his second term was spent at odds with the United States, the U.N.’s biggest contributor, as he tried to lean on it to pay almost $2 billion in arrears.
At the end of his Nobel acceptance speech Annan reminded the world why such pressure is necessary. “Beneath the surface of states and nations, ideas and language, lies the fate of individual human beings in need,” he said. “Answering their needs will be the mission of the United Nations in the century to come.”
Kofi Atta Annan was born April 8, 1938, into an elite family in Kumasi, Ghana, the son of a provincial governor and grandson of two tribal chiefs.
He became fluent in English, French and several African languages, attending an elite boarding school and the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi. He finished his undergraduate work in economics at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1961. From there he went to Geneva, where he began his graduate studies in international affairs and launched his U.N. career.
Annan married Titi Alakija, a Nigerian woman, in 1965, and they had a daughter, Ama, and a son, Kojo. He returned to the U.S. in 1971 and earned a master’s degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management. The couple separated during the 1970s and, while working in Geneva, Annan met his second wife, Swedish lawyer Nane Lagergren. They married in 1984.
After leaving his highprofile U.N. perch, Annan didn’t let up. In 2007, his Geneva-based foundation was created.
That year he helped broker peace in Kenya, where election violence had killed over 1,000 people.
He also joined The Elders, an elite group of former leaders founded by Nelson Mandela, eventually succeeding Desmond Tutu as its chairman.
Annan “represented our continent and the world with enormous graciousness, integrity and distinction,” Tutu said Saturday in a statement, adding that “we give great thanks to God” for him.
His homeland of Ghana was shaken by his death. “One of our greatest compatriots,” President Nana Akufo-Addo said, calling for a week with flags at half-staff. “Rest in perfect peace, Kofi. You have earned it.”
Annan is survived by his wife and three children.
The United Nations urged all sides of the Afghan conflict to protect aid workers delivering critical assistance to a population caught in relentless violence.
Afghanistan remains among the three most dangerous countries for aid workers, and a recent escalation in violence has often blocked important relief from reaching civilians.
The appeal Saturday came as the Afghan government and aid agencies began delivering assistance to Ghazni, a city 90 miles south of the capital, Kabul, which was under a Taliban siege for several days. Hospitals were overwhelmed with casualties, and the water supply, electricity and telecoms were shut down.
“My plea to the Taliban, to everybody engaged in violence in this country, is please respect the work of aid agencies,” Toby Lanzer, the U.N’s humanitarian coordinator in Afghanistan, said last week.
“This year so far, we have had 23 aid workers killed. We have had 37 aid workers seriously injured. We have had 74 aid workers abducted. It is a disgrace,” he said.
Civilians have borne the brunt of the most recent conflict in Afghanistan, which began with the U.S. invasion in 2001.
Since 2009, when the U.N. began recording civilian casualties, more than 30,000 Afghan civilians have been killed and more than 55,000 have been wounded.
Adding to the woes of Afghan civilians this year is a drought affecting two-thirds of the country. The U.N. says more than 2 million people could face food shortages. The west of the country is the worst hit, with more than 20,000 people already displaced from two provinces.
Officials are still assessing the damage in Ghazni after the assault. With telecom networks down for most of the fighting, information has trickled out sparsely.
Casualty figures remain uncertain; an official said about 70 civilians, 155 members of the security forces and more than 400 Taliban insurgents were killed. Local residents have also claimed that Afghan and U.S. airstrikes meant to try to push back the Taliban have caused civilian casualties.