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IN the past year I have read many attacks on the United Nations. That
pains me, because I have served the U.N. all my life. I have done, and
am still doing, everything I can to correct its imperfections, and to
improve and strengthen it. And I believe profoundly in the importance
of that task, because a strong U.N. is of vital importance to
humanity.
When the appalling disaster of the tsunami struck in the
Why? For two reasons.
First, the U.N. had the necessary skills. Its Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, which I formed in 1997 soon
after I took office, is designed exactly for the role that was
required " a light structure, not getting in anyone's way or doing
their job for them, but able quickly to locate needed supplies and
contact whatever organisation can deliver them.
But second, and even more important, everyone was willing to work
with the U.N.: the governments and people of the affected countries,
the donors, and the nonprofit organisations whose role is so essential
in all emergencies, great and small. All of them recognise that the
U.N. is the right body to lead, because it is in no one's pocket. It
belongs to the world.
Another example of the U.N's importance " a more difficult one,
because of its sharply divisive political context" is
Indisputably, the war in
And yet, when the
Last year, when the Coalition wanted to transfer power to an interim
Iraqi government, they turned again to the U.N. for help. They knew
that if the U.N. were involved in choosing it the new government would
have a much better chance of being accepted as legitimate and
sovereign.
Both Iraqis and Americans also turned to the U.N. for help in
organising last month's elections. The U.N. helped to draft the
electoral law and the law on political parties, to choose and train
the members of the independent electoral commission and hundreds of
election organisers (who in turn trained thousands of others), and to
draw up the voters' lists. It was also there to give advice on the
actual conduct of the election, the vote count, and the announcement
of the results.
Again, we had the necessary expertise " we have organised or helped
organise elections in 92 countries, including most recently
Now Iraqis have their own elected Transitional National Assembly, and
will soon have an elected government answerable to it. The assembly
has to draft a constitution acceptable to all Iraqis, and the
government has to isolate its most violent opponents by winning the
trust of groups who did not vote in the elections " mainly Sunni Arabs
" and bringing them into the political process.
Here too, the U.N. can help " and it will. We can give expert advice,
if asked, on the drafting of the constitution. We can reach out to
those groups " mainly Sunni Arabs " who stayed away from the
elections, for whatever reason, but are willing to pursue their goals
through peaceful negotiation and dialogue. And we can bring together
the world community in a joint effort to help
Even the scars left by past differences can be turned into today's
opportunities. Precisely because the United Nations did not agree on
some earlier actions in
I could go on. I could speak also about the 18 peace operations we
have in war-torn countries around the world, and the tens of millions
of homeless and hungry people, over and above those affected by the
tsunami, to whom we are bringing relief. Indeed, when ill-informed
critics try to cut the U.N. off at the knees, the people they hurt
most are not diplomats or bureaucrats but innocent people caught in
war or poverty, in desperate need of the world's help.
Some decry what they see as a lack of principle in U.N.
decision-making, pointing to the compromises that inevitably emerge
from a body of 191 member states. Anyone who attacks the U.N. for
failing to serve the global interest should, as part of that exercise,
critically examine the decisions of each nation within the body. They
will find that there is plenty of criticism to go round. But they
should also remember that the U.N., like the
Of course the U.N. is far from perfect"even if some of the recent
allegations made about it have been overblown. The interim report of
Paul Volcker's independent inquiry has helped put the Oil For Food
programme in perspective. Some of the more hyperbolic assertions about
it have been proven untrue.
Yet I am the first to admit that real and troubling failures "ethical
lapses and lax management " have been brought to light. I am
determined, with the help of member states, to carry through the
management reforms which are clearly called for by Mr. Volcker's
findings.
Even more shocking are widespread cases of sexual exploitation and
abuse of minors by peacekeepers and U.N. officials in the
In my eight years as secretary-general, I had already done a lot"with
the support of member states, often led by the
The U.N. cannot expect to survive into the 21st century unless
ordinary people throughout the world feel that it does something for
them " helping to protect them against conflict (both civil and
international), but also against poverty, hunger, disease and the
erosion of their natural environment. And in recent years, bitter
experience has taught us that a world in which whole countries are
left prey to misgovernment and destitution is not safe for anyone. We
must turn the tide against disease and hunger, as well as against
terrorism, the proliferation of deadly weapons and crime " starting,
urgently, with decisions from the Security Council to end the
abominable crimes in
This September, we have a real opportunity to make the U.N. more
useful to all its members. Leaders from all over the world are coming
to a U.N. summit in