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‘european portuguese’ –> [ɐ̃ˈtɔnju ɡuˈtɛʁɨʃ]
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*born ’30 april 1949’*
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*’antónio manuel de oliveira guterres’ is a ‘portuguese politician’ serving as the 9th ‘secretary-general’ of the ‘united nations’*
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A member of the Portuguese Socialist Party, he served as prime minister of Portugal from 1995 to 2002.
Guterres served as secretary-general of the Socialist Party from 1992 to 2002.
He was elected prime minister of Portugal in 1995 and resigned in 2002 after the Socialist Party was defeated in the 2001 Portuguese local elections.
After six years governing without an absolute majority and with a bad economy, the Socialist Party did worse than expected because of losses in Lisbon and Porto, where polls indicated they had a solid lead. Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues assumed the Socialist Party leadership, but the general election was lost to the Social Democratic Party, led by José Manuel Barroso.
Guterres served as president of the Socialist International from 1999 to 2005. He was the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 2005 to 2015.[1] In both a 2012 and 2014 poll, the Portuguese public ranked him the best prime minister of the previous 30 years.[2][3]
Early life[edit]
Guterres was born and raised in Lisbon, Portugal, the son of Virgílio Dias Guterres (1913–2009) and Ilda Cândida de Oliveira (born 1923).[4]
He attended the Camões Lyceum (now Camões Secondary School), where he graduated in 1965, winning the National Lyceums Award (Prémio Nacional dos Liceus) as the best student in the country. He studied physics and electrical engineering at Instituto Superior Técnico – Technical University of Lisbon in Lisbon. He graduated in 1971 and started an academic career as an assistant professor teaching systems theory and telecommunications signals, before leaving academic life to start a political career.[5]
Political career[edit]
Guterres’s political career began in 1974, when he became a member of the Socialist Party. Shortly thereafter, he quit academic life and became a full-time politician. In the period following the Carnation Revolution of 25 April 1974 that put an end to Caetano’s dictatorship, Guterres became involved in Socialist Party leadership and held the following offices:
Head of Office of the Secretary of State of Industry (1974 and 1975)[6]
Deputy for Castelo Branco in the Portuguese National Parliament (1976–1995)[7]
Leader of the parliamentary bench of the Socialist Party, succeeding Jorge Sampaio (1988)[citation needed]
Guterres was a member of the team that negotiated the terms of Portugal’s entry into the European Union in the late 1970s.[8] He was a founding member of the Portuguese Refugee Council in 1991.[9]
In 1992, after the Socialists’ third consecutive defeat in Parliamentary elections,[10] Guterres became secretary-general of the Socialist Party and leader of the opposition during Aníbal Cavaco Silva’s government.[11] At the time, he was the party’s third leader in six years.[12] He was also selected as one of the 25 vice presidents of the Socialist International in September 1992.[13]
His election represented a break with tradition for the Socialists: not only was Guterres not associated with either the faction around then-president and former prime minister Mário Soares or the party’s left wing led by Guterres’s predecessor Sampaio, but he was also a devout Catholic, running counter to the party’s historical secularism. He consulted with Portugal’s civil society in formulating policy, meeting a range of intellectuals, scientists and entrepreneurs from across the country and the political spectrum in the run-up to the next general election.[10]
Prime Minister of Portugal[edit]
Aníbal Cavaco Silva did not seek a fourth term as prime minister of Portugal (in order to run for the 1996 presidential election) and the Socialist Party won the 1995 parliamentary election. President Soares appointed Guterres as prime minister[14] and his Cabinet took the oath of office on 28 October that year.
Guterres ran on a platform of keeping a tight hold on budget spending and inflation in a bid to ensure that Portugal met the Euro convergence criteria by the end of the decade, as well as increasing rates of participation in the labor market, especially among women, improving tax collection and cracking down on tax evasion, increased involvement of the mutual and nonprofit sectors in providing welfare services, a means-tested guaranteed minimum income (known as the Rendimento Minimo Garantido), and increased investment in education.[10] He was then one of seven Social Democratic prime ministers in the European Union, joining political allies in Spain, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Greece and the Netherlands.[15]
First term (1995–1999)[edit]
With a style markedly different from that of his predecessor, and based on dialogue and discussion with all sections of society, Guterres was a popular prime minister in his first years in office. Portugal was enjoying an economic expansion that allowed the Socialists to reduce budget deficits while increasing welfare spending and creating new conditional cash transfer programs.[16] His government also accelerated the program of privatizations that Cavaco Silva’s government had begun: 29 companies were privatized between 1996 and 1999, with proceeds from privatizations in 1996–97 greater than those of the previous six years, and the public sector’s share of GDP halved from 11% in 1994 to 5.5% five years later. Share ownership was also widened, with 800,000 people investing in Portugal Telecom upon its privatization in 1996 and 750,000 applying for shares in Electricidade de Portugal.[10]
In 1998, Guterres presided over Expo 98 in Lisbon, commemorating the 500th anniversary of the voyage of Vasco da Gama.[17] Also in 1998, two nationwide referenda were held. The first one was held in June and asked voters whether abortion rules should be liberalized. The Socialist Party split over the issue of liberalization, and Guterres led the pro-life side, which eventually won the referendum.[16] A second referendum was held in November, this time over the regionalization of the mainland. Both Guterres and his party supported such an administrative reform, but the voters rejected it.
Contrary to his party stance and following the removal of homosexuality from the list of mental illnesses by the World Health Organization in 1990, Guterres said, in 1995, that “he did not like homosexuality” and that it was “something that bothered him”.[18]
On foreign policy, Guterres campaigned for United Nations intervention in East Timor in 1999, after it was virtually destroyed by Indonesian-backed militias when it voted for independence.[9] He also finalized the 12-year negotiations on the transfer of sovereignty over Macau, which had been a Portuguese colony, to Chinese control in 1999.[19]
Second term (1999–2002)[edit]
In the 1999 parliamentary election the Socialist Party and the opposition won exactly the same number of MPs (115). Guterres was reappointed to office and from January to July 2000 occupied the six-month rotating presidency of the European Council. His second term in government was not as successful, however. Internal party conflicts, an economic slowdown, and the Hintze Ribeiro Bridge disaster damaged his authority and popularity. Nevertheless, some long-lasting measures were taken during his second term: in October 2000, the Parliament approved the decriminalization of drug use (effective 1 July 2001)[20] and in March 2001, same-sex civil unions were legalized.[19][21]
In December 2001, following a disastrous defeat for the Socialist Party in local elections, Guterres resigned[14] to “prevent the country from falling into a political swamp”.[22] President Jorge Sampaio dissolved Parliament and called for elections. Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues, until then Minister for Social Security, assumed the Socialist Party leadership, but the general election was lost to the Social Democratic Party of José Manuel Durão Barroso, who later became President of the European Commission.
[edit]
Guterres was elected president of Socialist International in November 1999,[23] overlapping with his second term as prime minister of Portugal until his resignation from the latter post in December 2001. He remained president of the Socialist International until June 2005.[23]
Diplomatic career[edit]
In 2005, following Guterres’s proposal, George Papandreou was elected vice president of the Socialist International; in 2006, Papandreou succeeded him as president of the Socialist International.
In May 2005, Guterres was elected High Commissioner for Refugees for a five-year term by the UN General Assembly, replacing Ruud Lubbers.[24][23]
High Commissioner for Refugees[edit]
As High Commissioner, Guterres headed one of the world’s largest humanitarian organizations, which at the end of his term had more than 10,000 staff working in 126 countries providing protection and assistance to over 60 million refugees, returnees, internally displaced people and stateless persons.[citation needed] His time in office was marked by a fundamental organizational reform, cutting staff and administrative costs in the UNHCR’s Geneva head office and expanding UNHCR’s emergency response capacity during the worst displacement crisis since the Second World War.[25][26]
On 19–23 March 2006, Guterres visited Beijing, China, and expressed his objection to repatriation of North Korean refugees by the Chinese government.[27][28]
In a February 2007 NPR interview devoted mainly to the plight of Iraqi refugees, Guterres said that this was one of the greatest refugee crises in the Middle East since 1948. Among poorly publicized refugee crises, he cited those in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[29] During his final years as High Commissioner, he worked chiefly to secure international aid for the refugees of the Syrian civil war, calling the refugee crisis an “existential” one for host countries (such as Lebanon and Jordan), and calling additional aid a “matter of survival” for the refugees.[30] He was an outspoken advocate for a more coordinated and humane approach by European countries to the Mediterranean refugee crisis.[31] In June 2013, he launched a US$5 billion aid effort, its biggest ever, to help up to 10.25 million Syrians that year.[32]
In what was widely considered a very effective PR move, Guterres appointed American actress Angelina Jolie as his special envoy to represent UNHCR and himself at the diplomatic level in 2012.[33] Together they visited the Kilis Oncupinar Accommodation Facility in Turkey (2012);[34] the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan (2013);[35] and the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta (2015). They also appeared jointly before the United Nations Security Council (2015).[36]
In early 2015, the General Assembly voted to extend Guterres’s mandate by 61⁄2 months to 31 December, on recommendation of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. In light of the European migrant crisis, the UNHCR’s 98-member executive committee (EXCOM) later requested that Ban recommend extending Guterres’s term by another year, but Ban disregarded the request.[37] Guterres left office on 31 December 2015, having served the second-longest term as High Commissioner in the organization’s history, after Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan.[38]
In 2015, President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa appointed Guterres to serve as a Member of the Council of State of Portugal; he resigned after being appointed as the UN’s 9th Secretary-General.[39][40]
United Nations Secretary-General[edit]
Candidacy[edit]
Guterres became United Nations Secretary-General on 1 January 2017, following his formal election by the UN General Assembly on 13 October 2016.[41]
On 29 February 2016, Guterres submitted his nomination as Portugal’s candidate for the 2016 UN Secretary-General selection.[42] This was the first time candidates for secretary-general had to present their platform in public hearings in the UN General Assembly, a process during which Guterres emerged as a much stronger candidate than had been initially expected, given that he fit the bill on neither the gender nor the geographic scores.[43]
On 5 October, the 15-member United Nations Security Council announced that it had agreed to nominate Guterres, after an informal secret ballot in which he gained 13 “encourage” votes and two “no opinion” votes.[44][45] The Security Council officially nominated Guterres in a formal resolution on 6 October. A week later, he was formally elected by the United Nations General Assembly in its 71st session. Guterres took office on 1 January 2017.[46]
The UN’s role in the Haiti cholera outbreak was widely discussed and criticized[47] after the Ban Ki-moon administration denied the issue for several months. According to the Boston-based Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti as well as numerous conclusive scientific studies, the UN is the proximate cause for bringing cholera to Haiti. Peacekeepers sent to Haiti from Nepal in 2010 were carrying asymptomatic cholera and failed to treat their waste properly before dumping it into one of Haiti’s main water streams.[48] During his UNSG informal dialogue, Jamaica, on behalf of the Caribbean Community, asked if the UN should assume liability for any deaths within local populations that result from the introduction of infectious disease by its peacekeepers. Jamaica also asked if Guterres believed compensation should be provided.[49] Guterres responded by calling the situation a “particularly complex question”, saying it was difficult to preserve diplomatic immunity while also ensuring there is no impunity, but that he would “pay a lot of attention in trying to find the right equilibrium between these two aspects that are absolutely crucial”.[49] In a UN General Assembly meeting in late October 2016, the representative from Haiti called the UN’s current and future response to the cholera epidemic “a litmus test of the system’s commitment to the promotion of human rights”.[50] Though many had hoped Guterres’s term would mark a break with the inaction that characterized Ban’s response to the epidemic, Guterres has done little to signal a commitment to Haitian cholera victims. As of April 2017, five months into his term as secretary-general, only $10 million had been contributed to the $400 million fund to fight cholera and provide material assistance to victims the UN announced in 2016.[51]
In 2016, Anders Kompass exposed the sexual assault of children by peacekeepers in the Central African Republic and, as a consequence, was dismissed by Ban’s administration before being rehabilitated in court.[52] During the United Nations Secretary-General Candidate informal dialogues, Guterres indicated it was completely unacceptable that there be UN forces committing human rights violations such as rape and sexual violence. “All of us together—states and UN—must do our utmost to ensure that any kind of action of this type is severely punished,” he said.[49] The United States raised the question of international tribunals to try peacekeepers for their crimes. Guterres responded by saying an independent jurisdiction would be excellent but that “the only way to get there is through a new compact with all key parties—true contributors, financial contributors—and to make sure that there is an adjustment in the relation between countries, the UN, and the support those that are contributing with troops receive, in order to be able to do it much better.”[49] He also indicated that there is a gap between theoretical zero tolerance and the ineffective zero tolerance that actually exists on the ground and needs to be overcome.[citation needed]
Tenure[edit]
On 1 January 2017, on his first day at the helm of the United Nations as secretary-general, Guterres pledged to make 2017 a year for peace. “Let us resolve to put peace first,” he said.[53]
On 12 April 2017, Guterres appointed an 8-member Independent Panel[54] to assess and enhance the effectiveness of UN-Habitat after Adoption of the New Urban Agenda. The panel’s recommendation to establish an independent coordinating mechanism, ‘UN-Urban’[55] met with criticism from urban experts and the African Urban Institute.[56]
On 20 June 2017, “Secretary-General António Guterres warned the Trump administration, that if the United States disengages from many issues confronting the international community it will be replaced”.[57]
In response to the death of Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo, who died of organ failure while in government custody, Guterres said he was deeply saddened.[58]
After the violence during the 2017 Catalan independence referendum, Guterres trusted Spanish institutions to find a solution.[59] He gave the same message when Catalonia declared independence on 27 October 2017 but said the solution should be made under the constitutional framework.[60]
Guterres criticized the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen and the naval, land and air blockade of Yemen. The blockade has further aggravated Yemen’s severe humanitarian crisis.[61] Guterres said that the intervention in Yemen “is a stupid war. I think this war is against the interests of Saudi Arabia and the Emirates… [and] of the people of Yemen.”[62]
Guterres opposed President Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.[63]
In March 2018, Guterres said the population of Syria’s Eastern Ghouta was living in “hell on earth”. In one district, 93% of buildings had been damaged or destroyed by December, according to UN satellite imagery analysis. A recent wave of bombings has caused further destruction.[64]
Guterres called the 2018 North Korea–United States summit a “crucial milestone” for nuclear disarmament. He urged both sides to “seize this momentous opportunity” and offered UN assistance to achieve the goal of dismantling North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.[65]
In August 2018, Guterres called for an independent investigation into a Saudi Arabian-led coalition air strike in Yemen that killed 51 civilians, including 40 children.[66]
Guterres condemned the persecution of the Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar and called for a stronger response to the crisis.[67]
In September 2018, during his address to the 73rd United Nations General Assembly, Guterres became the first secretary to say that advancing technology will disrupt labor markets like never before and to advocate stronger safety nets like Universal Basic Income.[68][69][70]
In 2019, human rights groups criticized Guterres for being “silent” as China sent ethnic Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities to the Xinjiang re-education camps. Human Rights Watch chief Kenneth Roth said that Guterres “has been notably silent on one of the most important, … the most brazen human rights abuses, … because he is worried about upsetting the Chinese.”[71]
In June 2019, Guterres stated that the “U.N. has the obligation to assume global leadership” in tackling climate change in the context of a visit to the pacific island of Tuvalu.[72] He had previously supported other multilateral environmental initiatives, such as the Global Pact for the Environment that was put forward by France in September 2017.[73]
In September 2019, Guterres condemned Israeli plans to annex the eastern portion of the occupied West Bank known as the Jordan Valley.[74]
Guterres expressed his “deep concern” at the spiralling violence in Syria a day after Turkey launched an offensive in Kurdish-controlled areas. He said any solution to the conflict needed to respect the sovereignty of the territory and the unity of Syria.[75][76]
Guterres praised the Israel–United Arab Emirates peace agreement, stating that he welcomes “any initiative that can promote peace and security in the Middle East region.”[77] Guterres expressed the hope that the agreement between Israel and Sudan to normalize relations will create opportunities for peace and prosperity.[78]
On 10 August 2020, responding to an explosion in Beirut, Guterres expressed his support for all people in need in Lebanon, especially women and girls who are most vulnerable in times of crisis.[79] On 22 September, he appealed for global solidarity to overcome COVID-19, and again called for a global ceasefire by the end of 2020.[80]
On 6 October 2020, Guterres expressed deep concern over the escalation of hostilities in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh and called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to immediately halt fighting and progress towards a peaceful resolution.[81]
Other activities[edit]
Dag Hammarskjöld Fund for journalists, chairman of the Honorary Advisory Council[82]
Caixa Geral de Depósitos, advisor to the board (2003–2005)
Champalimaud Foundation, member of the Vision Award Jury[83]
Clean Cooking Alliance, member of the Leadership Council[84]
Club of Madrid, member (since 2002)[85]
European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), member
International Gender Champions (IGC), Member[86]
European Regional Innovation Awards, chairman of the Jury (2004)
Friends of Europe, member of the board of trustees
Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, non-executive member of the board of trustees (2013–2018)[87]
World Economic Forum (WEF), member of the Global Agenda Council on Humanitarian Assistance (2008–2009)[88]
He resigned from the International Peace Institute in October 2020.[89]
Personal life[edit]
In 1972, Guterres married child psychiatrist[16] Luísa Amélia Guimarães e Melo, with whom he had two children, Pedro Guimarães e Melo Guterres (born 1977) and Mariana Guimarães e Melo de Oliveira Guterres (born 1985). His wife died of cancer at the Royal Free Hospital in London in 1998 at the age of 51.[11][90][91]
In 2001, Guterres married Catarina Marques de Almeida Vaz Pinto (b. 1960),[92] a former Portuguese State Secretary for Culture and Culture Secretary for the City Council of Lisbon.[93][94]
In addition to his native Portuguese, Guterres speaks English, French, and Spanish.[95]
Guterres is a practicing Catholic.[91] During his university years, he joined the Group of Light, a club for young Catholics, where he met Father Vítor Melícias, a prominent Franciscan priest and church administrator who remains a close friend and confidant.[16]
Recognition[edit]
Honours[edit]
Portuguese[edit]
Foreign[edit]
Honorary degrees[edit]
2010 – Honorary Doctorate, University of Beira Interior[103]
2014 – Honorary Doctorate, Meiji University[104]
2016 – Honorary Doctorate of Laws, Carleton University[105]
2016 – Honorary Doctorate, University of Coimbra[106]
2016 – Honorary Doctorate, European University of Madrid[107]
2017 – Honorary Doctorate, University of South Carolina[108]
Other awards[edit]
2005 – Personality of the Year by the Foreign Press Association in Portugal (Associação de Imprensa Estrangeira em Portugal, AIEP)
2007 – Freedom Award (shared with Angelina Jolie)[109]
2009 – Calouste Gulbenkian International Prize (shared with the Peace Research Institute in the Middle East)
2009 – Forbes List of The World’s Most Powerful People in 2009[110]
2015 – W. Averell Harriman Democracy Award
2015 – The National German Sustainability Award
2019 – Charlemagne Prize
See also[edit]
Climate change mitigation
List of trips by António Guterres
References[edit]
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^ “How The World Is Reacting To Trump Recognizing Jerusalem As Israel’s Capital”. NPR. 6 December 2017. Archived from the original on 4 August 2019. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
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^ “Human rights groups call for investigation into China’s Uighur ‘re-education camps'”. SBS News. 5 February 2019. Archived from the original on 7 February 2019. Retrieved 7 February 2019.
^ “U.N. Head: Climate Change Can Prove the Value of Collective Action”. Time. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
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External links[edit]
Official website of Antonio Guterres – UN Secretary-General
Official website of António Guterres in Gov.pt (in Portuguese)
Appearances on C-SPAN
Party political offices
Preceded by
Jorge Sampaio Secretary-General of the Socialist Party
1992–2002 Succeeded by
Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues
Political offices
Preceded by
Jorge Sampaio Leader of the Opposition
1992–1995 Succeeded by
Fernando Nogueira
Preceded by
Aníbal Cavaco Silva Prime Minister of Portugal
1995–2002 Succeeded by
José Manuel Barroso
Transnational offices
Preceded by
Pierre Mauroy President of the Socialist International
1999–2005 Succeeded by
George Papandreou
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Ruud Lubbers United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
2005–2015 Succeeded by
Filippo Grandi
Preceded by
Ban Ki-moon (South Korea) Secretary-General of the United Nations
2017–present Incumbent
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ant%C3%B3nio_Guterres
António Guterres
Contributors to Wikimedia projects
40-51 minutes
His Excellency
António Guterres
António Guterres – 2019 (48132270313) (cropped).jpg
Guterres in 2019.
9th Secretary-General of the United Nations
Incumbent
Assumed office
1 January 2017
Deputy Amina Mohammed
Preceded by Ban Ki-moon
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
In office
15 June 2005 – 31 December 2015
Secretary-General Kofi Annan
Ban Ki-moon
Preceded by Ruud Lubbers
Succeeded by Filippo Grandi
Prime Minister of Portugal
In office
28 October 1995 – 6 April 2002
President Mário Soares
Jorge Sampaio
Deputy Jorge Coelho
José Sócrates
Fernando Gomes
Armando Vara
António José Seguro
Preceded by Aníbal Cavaco Silva
Succeeded by José Manuel Barroso
President of the Socialist International
In office
10 November 1999 – 15 June 2005
Preceded by Pierre Mauroy
Succeeded by George Papandreou
Secretary-General of the Socialist Party
In office
23 February 1992 – 21 January 2002
President António de Almeida Santos
Preceded by Jorge Sampaio
Succeeded by Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues
Leader of the Opposition
In office
23 February 1992 – 28 October 1995
Prime Minister Aníbal Cavaco Silva
Preceded by Jorge Sampaio
Succeeded by Fernando Nogueira
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
In office
3 June 1976 – 4 April 2002
Constituency Castelo Branco
Personal details
Born
António Manuel de Oliveira Guterres
30 April 1949 (age 71)
Lisbon, Portugal
Nationality Portuguese
Political party Socialist
Spouse(s)
Luísa Guimarães e Melo
(m. 1972; died 1998)
Catarina Vaz Pinto
(m. 2001)
Children 2
Alma mater Instituto Superior Técnico – University of Lisbon
Signature
Website António Guterres
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👈👈👈 ☜ *“BAN KI-MOON”*
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👈👈👈☜*“UN SECRETARY-GENERALS”* ☞ 👉👉👉
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