Søren Jessen-Petersen dansk kandidat som ny chef for UNHCR

Hedebølge i Californien. Verdens klimakrise har enorme sundhedsmæssige konsekvenser. Alligevel samtænkes Danmarks globale klima- og sundhedsindsats i alt for ringe grad, mener tre  debattører.


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Regeringen har besluttet at anmelde Søren Jessen-Petersen, der er generalsekretær Kofi Annans særlige udsending i Kosovo, som Danmarks kandidat til posten som ny flygtningehøjkommissær, efter at Ruud Lubbers har forladt posten før tiden. Det skete på grund af anklager om sex-chikane.

FN-missionen i New York har den 9. marts overrakt Kofi Annan udenrigsminister Per Stig Møllers anmeldelse af Søren Jessen-Petersens kandidatur.

Det er FNs generalsekretær, som udpeger den nye flygtningehøjkommissær, og der foregår således ingen egentlig valgkampagne.

Danmark har en gang tidligere besat denne post, idet fhv. statsminister Poul Hartling var flygtningehøjkommissær i perioden 1978-85. I den tid sad Søren Jessen-Petersen i Hartlings sekretariat sammen med bl.a. Ole Volfing.

Hartlings skudsmål som flygtningehøjkomissær var blandet og hans sidste embedsperiode blev kun forlænget med 3 år mod normalt 5.

Søren Jessen-Petersens officielle CV:

Mr. Jessen-Petersen was named Special Representative of the UN Secretay-General and head of UNMIK (Kosovo) on 16 June 2004. He has enjoyed a long and distinguished career as an international civil servant, working with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the European Union and the United Nations Secretariat.

He served as the European Union Special Representative in Skopje from February to June 2004. In this post he was responsible for establishing and maintaining close contact between the European Union and the Government of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), as well as the other parties involved in the peace process.

Prior to this he served as the Chairman of the European Union Stability Pacts Migration, Asylum, Refugees Regional Initiative (MARRI), where he initiated, developed and directed a strategy to manage population movements in the Western Balkans.

Mr. Jessen-Petersen also chaired the MARRI Steering Committee, composed of the States of the Western Balkans, European Union member States, other State members of the Stability Pact, relevant international organizations, such as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), UNHCR, the International Organization for Migration and the International Centre for Migration Policy Development and non-governmental organizations.

Mr. Jessen-Petersen served as Assistant High Commissioner at UNHCR headquarters in Geneva from January 1998 to December 2001 in which capacity he headed all UNHCR operations, directly supervising all UNHCR global Bureaus and undertaking over 80 missions to numerous field offices.

Prior to this he served as Director of the UNHCR Liaison Office at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, from August 1994 until January 1998. As such, he functioned as the High- Commissioners liaison with the Secretary-General’s Office, as well as other United Nations Departments.

He represented the High Commissioner as a member of various committees and meetings at the United Nations Headquarters, including the Secretary-General’s Steering Committee on United Nations Reform and the Executive Committees on Peace and Security, and Humanitarian Affairs.

From December 1995 to September 1996, Mr. Jessen-Petersen served as the High Commissioners Special Envoy to the former Yugoslavia (based in Sarajevo), where he was responsible for developing the strategy for and overseeing the implementation of Annex VII of the Dayton Peace Agreement and directed a 350 million US dollar humanitarian operation for approximately 4 million refugees, displaced persons, returnees and other victims, and managing more than 500 UNHCR staff.

Between 1990 and 1993, Mr. Jessen-Petersen served as the Chef de Cabinet of the High Commissioner in UNHCR Headquarters in Geneva. As such, he served as main political and diplomatic advisor to the High Commissioner. Simultaneously, he was the Director of External Relations (1992-1994) and directed UNHCRs external contacts with governments and other organizations, fund raising and public information activities during a period when UNHCR was mobilizing some 1 billion dollar (5,7 mia. DKR) annually.

In 1989, he served, on secondment from UNHCR, as Special Adviser to the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, and as a member of the Secretary-General’s Task Force on the process leading to the independence of Namibia.

In 1986, Mr. Jessen-Petersen opened the UNHCR Regional Office for Nordic countries where, based in Stockholm, he served as the High Commissioners Regional Representative until 1989, covering Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden.

His other assignments include: Chairman of UNHCRs Appointments, Promotion and Postings Board (1993); Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Conference on Asylum-Seekers and Refugees in Europe (1985); Executive Secretary of the Second International Conference on Assistance to Refugees in Africa (ICARA II) from 1983 to 1984; Chief of Secretariat of UNHCRs Executive Committee (1981-1982). He also served with UNHCR in Africa (Zambia, Egypt and Ethiopia) from 1972 to 1977.

Mr. Jessen-Petersen is a lawyer and journalist by training, and has numerous publications. He is married and has four children.

Kilde: www.um.dk