UN General Assembly elects Guterres as secretary-general

UNITED NATIONS : The UN General Assembly elected Antonio Guterres on Thursday as the next secretary-general of the United Nations, a post he will take over on January 1 at a time of global turmoil.
The 193 U.N member states elected Guterres, a former Portuguese prime minister, by acclamation.
Assembly President Peter Thompson introduced the resolution to elect Gutteres, said members wanted it adopted by acclamation, and banged his gavel in approval as diplomats broke into applause.
Guterres "embodies the highest standards of competence, integrity and leadership," Thompson said.
The 67-year-old Guterres, who served as the U.N refugee chief for 10 years until last December, was nominated by acclamation by the Security Council last week after its sixth informal poll. He topped all six polls, which included a total of 13 candidates- seven women and six men.
Guterres' selection disappointed many who had campaigned for the first woman or the first representative from an Eastern European country to lead the world body, but diplomats stressed they were voting for the best candidate regardless of other criteria.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who will leave the job on Dec. 31 after his second five-year term ends, referred to Guterres' decade as U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights. Ban told the assembly that Guterres is "best known where it counts most, on the front lines of armed conflict and humanitarian suffering."
In addition to "deep and solid political experience" including two terms as Portugal's prime minister, Ban said, "his political instincts are those of the United Nations-cooperations for the common good and shared responsibility for people and the planet."
Gutterres will be the ninth secretary-General in the organizations' 71-year history.
"He'll take over on the first of January at a crucial time for the U.N, when it is facing huge challenges on peace and security but also on international development and human rights. And the world needs a strong United Nations and he is the best possible leader to build on the work of his predecessors to provide that leadership," said Britain's U,N ambassador, Mathew Rycroft.a

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