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Serb minister elected next General Assembly head

3 comments, 100 views, posted 8:08 pm 08/06/2012 in Politics by tricpe
tricpe has 8362 posts, 3215 threads, 1720 points, location: In a pair of Speedo
Uber Member

Oh, dear! Don't get me wrong, this guy is a genius. He graduated in theoretical and financial mathematics at Cambridge, and then had his MSc at Harvard, in Public Administration in International Development. But he's one of those numbnuts that want to prove all thse crazy theorems that are unsolved for ages, like the last Ferma's theorem. Most of the time as a exterior minister in Serbia, he was visiting (third) world countries, convincing them never to acknowledge the independence of Kosovo. He spent millions of $ in the process... Wiki on Vuk Jeremic

Serb minister elected next General Assembly head, sign of country’s makeover on world stage

UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. General Assembly on Friday elected Serbia’s foreign minister as president of its next session, a sign of his country’s rehabilitation on the world stage after the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

Vuk Jeremic, the first Serb to hold a top U.N. post, defeated Lithuania’s U.N. Ambassador Dalius Cekuolis by a vote of 99-85 on the first ballot after an intense behind-the-scenes campaign. There was one abstention and several absentees in the 193-member world body.

“A painful era has now come to an end,” Jeremic said. “Today our nation can proudly stand before the world again.”

The one-year presidency of the General Assembly rotates among regions, and this was the first contested election since 1991. Usually, a region puts forward a single candidate, but this year Eastern Europe had two contenders.

It was not immediately clear whether the 36-year-old Jeremic would be the youngest president of the General Assembly when he takes over from Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser of Qatar on Sept. 18 at the start of the 67th session.

Unlike the more powerful 15-member Security Council, whose decisions are legally binding, the General Assembly’s resolutions carry no legal force, but it is the world’s primary forum for debate. It adopts new treaties, controls the U.N. budget and decides how much each nation should contribute.

Jeremic told diplomats he viewed his election primarily as a tribute to the people of Serbia.

Looking back at the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, he said the “ferocious internal strife, the ensuing devastation and fratricide left deep wounds in their wake.”

Jeremic said Serbia, once the largest of Yugoslavia’s republics which became a U.N. member in 2000, has in the past few years offered “a hand of friendship and reconciliation” to its neighbors.

Jeremic, who has been foreign minister for the past five years, has been a frequent visitor to the United Nations, appearing before the U.N. Security Council on numerous occasions when it has taken up Kosovo. The former Serb province declared its independence in 2008, but Serbia does not recognize Kosovo’s secession.

Serbia has close cultural and political ties to Russia, and diplomats pointed to Moscow’s support for Jeremic as a key to his victory. Last week, Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said he was sure Jeremic would be elected.

Cekuolis angered Russia at the General Assembly during its commemoration of the 65th anniversary of the end of World War II in 2010 when he said the war’s end “did not bring freedom to our nation.”

“It resulted in new Soviet occupation and annexation,” he said. “My country fell under a totalitarian regime, Soviet communism.”

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Comments

1
10:05 pm 08/06/2012

z0phi3l

Just shows how out of touch with reality the UN is, they are constantly electing THE worse people for so called important jobs

0
10:39 pm 08/06/2012

tricpe

When I was living in Switzerland back in 2009, I visited UN Geneva HQ, and had a guided tour. Apparently, the idea for the UN was born after WW I, in the form of League of Nations. The main goal was to prevent another global war. In the 1930-ies, after the great depression, and after Hitler came to power in Germany, they saw that the new war is coming, but failed to prevent it. So, the guide then said that after failing in that, they pretty much stopped all of their actions. Naturally, I asked why, and she just said something like "Well, they did not prevent the war!" "But the war was in progress, if they wanted peace, why didn't they do something (anything) to end it asap, instead of wasting some 50,000,000 humans in the enxt 6 years?" She just smiled and continued with her tour.

One more thing about my own personal experience is the UN sanctions that were brought up to Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1990-ies. I don't really know what goal UN set for those sanctions, but what they did is allowed the worst human scum to become the dominant force in Serbia/Monte Negro. Milosevic and his "team" got over the top rich, while my father and mother (both with University diploma, she's a judge, he's a retired highschool teacher), my late brother and myself (both of us were at school at the time) had to figure out how to live with 10 Deutsch Marks a month.... Those sanctions did nothign for the people in Serbia. Sure, Milosevic got his power by being elected by the people and the people should've been punished. IMHO, the best way to do that is to fully occupy the teritory of a land and make it a protectorate for 100 years, until all the people that were relevant at the time of the war die, and then let them live as they please....

1
2:10 pm 09/06/2012

Viqta

But then, what is the General Assembly where the more-powerful Security Council is there? And what's the talk about worse people; it's rather subjective, you know?

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