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International News Updates |
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18 May 2009 The United Nations nuclear watchdog
has heard from five candidates competing to become the
agency's next director-general, after it failed to
elect a successor earlier this year.
The contenders - from Japan, South Africa, Spain,
Belgium and Slovenia - presented their credentials and
answered questions from International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) board members behind closed doors in
Vienna, the Austrian capital.
Elections to decide who will replace Mohamed ElBaradei,
who is stepping down in November after 12 years in
office, will begin on June 9.
Tuesday's meeting comes a day after a nuclear test by
North Korea, which has angered the international
community and poses a significant challenge for the UN
agency.
'Objective assessment'
Taous Feroukhi, chairwoman of the the IAEA's board,
said the meeting was "an opportunity for the five
candidates to address the entire membership" of the
agency.
"It will help the member states have an objective
assessment of the five candidates. This is the main
purpose," she said, adding that there would be no
formal vote on the day.
Jean-Pol Poncelet from Belgium, Yukiya Amano of Japan,
Ernest Petric of Slovenia, Abdul Samad Minty of South
Africa and Luis Echavarri of Spain each gave a short
presentation to the board.
After the meeting Amano, 62, said: "Everyone is
strong. Everyone is a serious candidate. All of us
have different background and different experience.
"This is a very transparent and competitive process. I
think this is good for strengthening agency."
Echavarri, the Spanish candidate, said it was
fundamental for the agency to remain independent and
objective.
"I think as a director-general you have to be very
well aware of the political consequences of what you
do," he said.
'Cat's paw'
ElBaradei's successor will take over sensitive
investigations into the nuclear activities of Syria,
Iran and North Korea, and will also have to persuade
member countries to contribute more money to the
agency's budget.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Andreas Persbo, a nuclear arms
control expert, said: "The agency faces many
challenges in the coming years.
"We have the entire issue with Iran that still needs
to be resolved and the agency plays an important role
here ... so you need a diplomatic, strong leader.
"North Korea ... are no longer members of the IAEA so
he [the director-general] has no formal authority even
to talk to them.
"North Korea has no intention of rejoining [the IAEA]
and ... once called the agency the cat's paw of the
United States, that just ran Western interests
completely.
Former race
IAEA governors have been searching in vain for a
strong consensus candidate who could bridge a damaging
split between industrialised and developing nations.
Developed states are mainly concerned about nuclear
proliferation while developing countries want someone
who plays an active role in delivering nuclear
technology around the world.
In March, a race between Amano and Minty was
inconclusive after neither candidate was able to
secure the two-thirds majority needed to become the
agency's new chief.
Slovenia's candidate is a former a former IAEA
ambassador, while Spain's Echavarri currently heads
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development's nuclear energy agency.
Poncelet is a former Belgian deputy prime minister,
defence and energy minister, and current senior vice
president of Areva, a French company which mainly
specialises in nuclear power.
Persbo said: "I would say Echavarri stands out. He is
a skilled diplomat, he has many years experience of
dealing with nuclear issues.
"He is well liked in the Western group and he has a
certain appeal also to developing nations."
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