UN
Secretary General António Guterres will this week address the
African Union (AU)
Summit in Addis Ababa for what is expected to be his final appearance
before African leaders as head of the United Nations, ahead of the
end of his term later this year.
African heads of state and government are converging in the country
from February 14-15 for the 39th ordinary session.
Several leaders have already started arriving in the country ahead of
the summit.
President William Ruto is among the leaders who will attend.
Guterres was expected to arrive in Addis today for several
engagements ahead of the anticipated key address.
As he prepares to deliver his farewell address to the continental
body, attention is increasingly shifting to the high-stakes global
process to select his successor, a race that will determine the next
leader of the world’s most influential multilateral institution at
a time of mounting geopolitical tensions and growing demands for UN
reform.
Guterres’ second
five-year term ends on December 31, 2026, bringing to a close a
decade marked by global crises ranging from pandemics and climate
emergencies to geopolitical conflict and humanitarian strain.
Following his
re-appointment, Guterres
vowed to use his second term to work towards ensuring “the
blossoming of trust between and among nations” and to engage in
confidence building.
He said
he will
also seek to inspire hope that things can be turned around, or that
the impossible might be made possible.
“The attitude is never
to give up,” he said on
June 18, 2021.
“This is not
idealistic or utopian but grounded in knowledge of history when big
transformations occurred and guided by the fundamental belief in the
inherent goodness of people. That breakthroughs are possible
when we expect it the least and against all odds. That is my
unwavering commitment.”
The process to select
his successor is already underway, with nominations open and early
candidates emerging for a position often described as the world’s
most impossible job.
HOW THE UN SECRETARY
GENERAL IS CHOSEN
Under Article 97 of the
UN Charter, the Secretary-General is appointed by the General
Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council.
In practice, this makes
the Security Council, and particularly its five permanent members,
the decisive power brokers.
Any candidate must first
survive a series of informal “straw polls” within the 15-member
Council.
A single veto from any of the permanent members, the United
States, Russia, China, the United Kingdom, or France, is enough to end
a candidacy.
Once the Council agrees
on a name, the General Assembly formally approves the appointment,
typically by acclamation.
The current selection
cycle was formally launched on November 25, 2025, through a joint
letter by the Presidents of the General Assembly and the Security
Council inviting member states to nominate candidates.
Countries have been
asked to submit nominations by April 1, 2026, ahead of public
interactive dialogues scheduled for late April.
In recent years, reforms
have made the process more transparent.
Candidates must submit
vision statements, curricula vitae, and disclosures on campaign
financing, and they will participate in webcast question-and-answer
sessions with member states.
TENURE AND CONVENTIONS
The Secretary-General
serves a five-year term, renewable.
Although there is no formal term
limit, modern practice has established a two-term convention,
followed by most recent office holders.
The role combines
administrative leadership of the UN Secretariat with political
responsibilities as a global mediator, crisis manager and diplomatic
“honest broker” between nations.
Over time, several
unwritten rules have shaped the selection.
Candidates are generally
expected to come from countries outside the five permanent members of
the Security Council and to have extensive diplomatic or political
experience.
Regional rotation is
also an important consideration, with member states seeking
geographic balance over time.
There is also growing
pressure to address gender imbalance.
In the UN’s nearly 80-year
history, no woman has served as Secretary General, a fact that has
prompted increasing calls for a historic breakthrough in the current
cycle.
WHO IS IN THE RACE
Early nominations
suggest the contest is taking shape around experienced international
figures, particularly from Latin America, which diplomats say is
widely seen as the region “next in line” for the post.
Among the candidates
publicly confirmed so far:
Michelle Bachelet
(Chile)—A former president of Chile and former UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, nominated by Chile with backing from
Brazil and Mexico.
Rafael Grossi
(Argentina)—Director General of the International Atomic Energy
Agency, nominated by Argentina.
Rebeca Grynspan (Costa
Rica)—Head of UN Trade and Development and a former Vice
President of Costa Rica, nominated by her government.
More candidates are
expected before the April deadline, and diplomatic lobbying is likely
to intensify throughout the year.
While regional rotation
is an established practice, it is not binding.
Previous contests have
produced compromise candidates from outside the anticipated region
when major powers failed to agree.
WHAT QUALIFICATIONS
MATTER
There is no formal
checklist for the job, but decades of practice have established a
profile for viable candidates.
Successful contenders
typically have senior
political or diplomatic leadership experience, deep
knowledge of international relations and multilateral institutions
and a
reputation for neutrality and consensus-building.
They also have fluency
in major UN working languages and
ability to command trust across geopolitical divides.
Historically, most
Secretaries General have been career diplomats or former heads of
state or government from middle-sized countries, seen as less
threatening to major powers.
Equally important is
political acceptability.
Analysts note that the
eventual winner is often not the most high-profile figure but the
candidate least objectionable to all five permanent members.
A DEMANDING ROLE IN A
DIVIDED WORLD
The next Secretary
General will take office on January 1, 2027, at a time when the UN
faces mounting challenges, from great-power rivalry and conflicts in
multiple regions to climate change, debt distress in developing
countries, and growing skepticism about multilateral institutions.
The office itself has
evolved with each holder.
While the Charter
defines the Secretary-General as the UN’s chief administrative
officer, the position has increasingly become a platform for global
advocacy, crisis diplomacy, and moral leadership.
Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal and UN refugee chief, has used the role to push
for climate action, humanitarian access and reforms to global
financial systems.
His successor will
inherit both the expectations and the constraints of an office that
depends largely on persuasion rather than power.
Global politics, quiet
diplomacy
Much of the decisive
bargaining will take place behind closed doors in New York, where
permanent Security Council members will weigh geopolitical interests
alongside personal credentials.
Despite the more open
public process, diplomats say the outcome will still hinge on
traditional power politics, regional balance, gender considerations
and the delicate art of compromise among rival global powers.
For Africa, the AU
Summit appearance by Guterres serves as a reminder that the continent
remains central to the UN agenda, from peacekeeping operations to
climate vulnerability and development financing.