Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Kofi
Annan
left
the
United
Nations
(UN)
far
more
committed
than
it
had
been
to
combating
poverty,
promoting
equality
and
fighting
for
human
rights
and
until
his
death
Saturday
he
was
speaking
out
strongly
for
nations
working
together
to
solve
problems
and
worried
about
the
rise
of
nationalism.
As
secretary-general
of
the
UN
from
1997
to
2006,
Annan
saw
as
his
greatest
achievements
the
programs
and
policies
he
put
in
place
to
reduce
inequality
within
and
between
countries,
to
combat
infectious
diseases
and
to
promote
human
rights
and
protect
civilians
from
war
crimes
including
genocide.
He
launched
the
UN
Millennium
Development
Goals
at
a
summit
of
world
leaders
in
2000
to
cut
extreme
poverty
by
half,
promote
equality
for
women,
ensure
every
child
has
a
primary
school
education,
reduce
maternal
and
child
mortality,
and
halt
the
spread
of
AIDS
all
by
2015.
Those
goals
only
a
few
of
which
were
fully
achieved
were
succeeded
by
an
expanded
list
of
UN
Sustainable
Development
Goals
for
2030
that
adds
issues
such
as
climate
action,
affordable
and
clean
energy,
and
promoting
peace
and
justice.
The
updated
list
is
a
major
focus
of
the
UN's
current
agenda.
As
UN
peacekeeping
chief
just
before
becoming
secretary-general,
Annan
shared
blame
for
the
failure
of
UN
troops
he
deployed
to
prevent
the
genocides
in
Rwanda
in
1994
and
in
the
Bosnian
town
of
Srebrenica
in
July
1995.
When
he
became
UN
chief,
Annan
launched
a
doctrine
of
'humanitarian
intervention'
to
prevent
governments
and
leaders
from
massacring
their
own
people.
At
a
summit
in
2005,
over
objections
from
some
countries,
191
nations
endorsed
what
has
become
known
as
the
'responsibility
to
protect'
civilians
and
head
off
the
world's
worst
crimes,
from
ethnic
cleansing
to
genocide.
This
doctrine
is
frequently
cited
but
to
the
dismay
of
UN
officials,
not
often
implemented.
Annan
also
saw
as
a
major
achievement
the
expansion
of
the
UN's
work
into
partnerships
with
businesses,
foundations,
universities
and
civil
society.
This
led,
for
example,
to
the
establishment
of
the
Global
Compact
in
2001
where
Annan
asked
corporate
leaders
to
publicly
commit
to
10
principles
in
the
areas
of
human
rights,
labor,
the
environment
and
anti-corruption.
More
than
9,000
of
the
world's
leading
CEOs
have
joined
the
compact,
which
continues
to
attract
new
members,
and
'corporate
responsibility'
has
become
a
key
feature
of
the
business
world.
When
Annan
handed
the
reins
of
the
UN
to
Ban
Ki-moon,
he
said
he
would
keep
working
on
African
issues,
human
rights,
global
warming
and
governance
issues,
and
speak
out
from
time
to
time
when
necessary.
He
told
one
farewell
party:
'You
can
take
the
man
out
of
the
UN,
but
you
can't
take
the
UN
out
of
the
man.'
Through