| S. Korean FM certain to be UN chief(AFP)Updated: 2006-10-07 09:02
 UNITED NATIONS - South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon, set to be 
formally endorsed as UN chief Kofi Annan's successor Monday, is the only 
candidate left in the race as all other contenders withdrew, a UN spokeswoman 
said. 
 
 
 
 
 |  South Korean Foreign Minister Ban Ki-Moon, 
 seen here in September 2006, who is expected to be confirmed as UN 
 secretary general on Monday, would be willing to visit North Korea to 
 negotiate an end to its nuclear program, foreign ministry officials in 
 Seoul said.[AFP]
 |  All six rivals who initially threw their hats into the ring have informed the 
Security Council that they were withdrawing their candidacies, UN deputy 
spokeswoman Marie Okabe said. 
 The last to pull out were Indian diplomat Shashi Tharoor, the UN 
undersecretary general for communications and public information who finished 
second to Ban in informal straw polls, and former Thai deputy prime minister 
Surakiart Sathirathai. 
 Earlier Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga, Jordan's UN ambassador Prince 
Zeid al-Hussein, Afghanistan's former finance minister Ashraf Ghani and Sri 
Lankan diplomat Jayantha Dhanapala also withdrew. 
 Last Monday Ban, 62, won a decisive fourth straw poll in the Security Council 
after securing crucial backing from its five veto-wielding permanent members 
(Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States). He had already won three 
previous polls by a wide margin. 
 Under the UN Charter, the secretary general is elected by the 192-member 
General Assembly on the recommendation of the Security Council. 
 After its formal vote next Monday, the Security Council is widely expected to 
recommend that the 192-member General Assembly in turn endorse Ban to succeed 
Annan when the Ghanaian UN chief steps down at the end of December after 10 
years in office.   |