DIPLOMAT OF THE WEEK
The diplomat in focus this week is Boutros Boutros-Ghali. He was an Egyptian diplomat and international civil servant who served as the sixth Secretary-General of the United Nations from a time period of 1992–1996. He was the first African and Arab to hold the position.
He is best known for introducing "An Agenda for Peace” (1992), which reshaped UN approaches to preventive diplomacy, peacekeeping, and peace-building in the post–Cold War era.
His tenure coincided with major global crises such as Rwandan Genocide and the conflict in Bosnia, highlighting both the possibilities and limits of UN intervention.
Boutros-Ghali served only one term, largely because the United States vetoed his second term, citing disagreements over UN reform and management style. Despite this, he remained influential in international affairs.
After leaving the UN, he served as Secretary-General of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. He remains a significant figure in African and global diplomacy.
SOMA
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