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New UN Chief No 'Pushover'

   
The next secretary-general of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon of South Korea, has pledged to be a decisive leader and cautioned those who call him low-key not to mistake him for a pushover.


"I may look low-key or (be) soft-spoken but that does not mean that I lack leadership or commitment," Ban told Reuters in his first formal interview since his appointment by acclamation by the 192-member General Assembly on Friday, October 13.

Modesty and humility were considered virtues by Asians, he said, but should not be misunderstood.

"I take decisive decisions whenever it is necessary," he said when asked about published reports his style made him an uncoupling choice for the job.

Ban, who was South Korea's foreign minister, comfortably beat six rivals to win the UN Security Council's nomination to succeed Kofi Annan, a Ghanaian who has led the world body since 1997.

Only the second Asian to head the United Nations, Ban will take over on Jan. 1 but said he wanted to start work on the transition as soon as possible. An aide said Ban could move to New York as soon as next month.

Balance

Ban made clear he would travel extensively, delegating much of the day-to-day running of the 9,000-strong UN bureaucracy to a deputy.

The US ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, has said Annan's successor should focus more on managing than on diplomacy, a view Ban delicately contradicted.

"The administrative burden of the secretary-general is too much," Ban said. "I will try to balance my work as a political leader as well as an administrative leader."

Ban will start his five-year term in what Annan has called the world's most impossible job with a daunting agenda that stretches from the threats of nuclear proliferation and terrorism to reform of the United Nations itself.

Ban sidestepped questions about future responses to North Korea's nuclear weapons test, such as whether he would be ready to visit Pyongyang early next year to help defuse tensions.

The 15-member Security Council planned to vote on Saturday, October 14, on a resolution, backed by Ban, imposing economic and arms sanctions on North Korea in response to the underground blast last Monday.

Ban, who became foreign minister in January 2004, has been closely involved in his country's dealings with North Korea and international efforts to settle the nuclear crisis with the communist government.

He declined to discuss possible senior-level changes at the world body, saying only he would ensure his choices were up to the job.

He mapped out a businesslike approach to reform, saying that while it would be difficult to shrink the United Nations and its various agencies, they had to work at full steam.

"We need to find out the comparative, competitive edge of each and every agency," Ban said in the interview, held in South Korea's UN mission across the street from UN headquarters on Manhattan's East River.

"It is necessary to maximize the strength and minimize the redundancy. ... We need to use already limited resources in a more effective, efficient way," he said.

A career diplomat who graduated at the top of his class in international relations from Seoul National University, he has served three times at his country's UN mission in New York.

His most recent tour was as chief of staff to the South Korean president of the General Assembly, which opened a day after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.

South Korean and other diplomats who have worked with him describe Ban as a skilled mediator and manager who is popular with staff and tirelessly hard-working.

Ban was born to a farming family in 1944 in the town of Chungju and is married to a woman he met at high school. They have two daughters and one son.

He told Reuters he had dreamed of being a diplomat since he was a boy but had not imagined he could be UN secretary-general, the world's top diplomat.

"Now I have realized my dream," he said.
  

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