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Search Result for “kofi annan”

Showing 1 - 7 of 7

OPINION

Human cost of war

Oped, Postbag, Published on 25/07/2025

» Re: "Thai airstrikes hit two Cambodian targets," (BP, July 24). 

OPINION

Dhaka's role in Myanmar's crisis

Oped, Alan Clements, Published on 23/08/2024

» As Bangladesh ushers in a new era of leadership under Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus, the world watches with hope and anticipation. His leadership, emerging from a period of student-led protests and political upheaval, symbolises a triumph of democracy and justice in a region long plagued by strife. But as Bangladesh looks inward to heal and rebuild, there is an urgent call for its new leadership to turn its gaze toward a neighbour in dire need -- Myanmar.

OPINION

Repatriation needs right conditions

Oped, Laetitia van den Assum and Kobsak Chutikul, Published on 27/03/2023

» Early this month, news broke about plans of Myanmar's military regime to start repatriating some 1,000 Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh to Myanmar's Rakhine State. Myanmar's generals are in a hurry. Reportedly, they want to start repatriation by mid-next month, during Ramadan. The choice of that date is no coincidence.

OPINION

Kofi Annan's lessons in global leadership

Oped, Nane Annan, Mark Malloch-Brown, Comfort Ero, Susana Malcorra and Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, Published on 09/06/2022

» The world is facing a set of acute crises without recent parallel: a war in Europe that could escalate into a nuclear conflict, skyrocketing food prices that are hitting the poor the hardest, the Covid-19 pandemic and the climate emergency. We need principled statesmen and women to forge bold, morally consistent responses to these and other global problems. Sadly, such leaders are in short supply.

OPINION

António Guterres does not deserve a second term

Oped, Mark S Cogan, Published on 22/01/2021

» United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres announced on Jan 11 that he would be seeking a second five-year term. Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal, campaigned for the position in 2016 with an agenda focused on UN reform, as well as positioned himself as someone who could bring consensus to persistent global challenges such as climate change and the forced displacement of people from around the globe. However, his tenure as the world's top diplomat has been disappointing, marked by failures to address human rights abuses, initiate fundamental institutional reforms, or champion multilateralism in the face of withering criticism by an isolationist American administration.

OPINION

Rakhine crisis needs holistic approach

Oped, Laetitia van den Assum & Kobsak Chutikul, Published on 21/10/2020

» When Myanmar joined Asean in 1997, it was considered a strategic move to counter the influence of China and India. Since then, Asean's relationship with the country has had many ups and downs, often due to persistent reports of human rights abuses.

OPINION

Focus needed as Rakhine crisis widens

Oped, Laetitia van den Assum & Kobsak Chutikul, Published on 28/02/2019

» With the Trump-Kim summit in Hanoi dominating news coverage and election campaigns in key regional states such as India, Indonesia and Thailand offering daily distractions, it is difficult to generate genuine interest in the continuing humanitarian and security crisis in and around Rakhine state in Myanmar. But it would be dangerous to move the issue to the back burner.