UN chief Ban Ki-moon retires to rings of praise and drums of criticism
The world organization blamed the outbreak on poor sanitary conditions at a Nepalese camp of UN peacekeepers. Victims were helped and programs initiated to prevent new cases but Ban didn't admit responsibility until only last August.
The sticking-to-his guns trait surfaced again after he said, during a visit to a camp in Western Sahara, that it appeared under "occupation."
That upset Morocco which annexed the region after the colonial power Spain surrendered it in 1975.
While he expressed regret through spokesman Stephen Dujarric at the "misunderstanding," there was no retraction.
Jonathan Tepperman, managing editor of Foreign Affairs, writing in a New York Times opinion piece during Ban's seventh year in office said, "The U.N. under Ban's stewardship has managed to get some things right: (generally) providing effective relief to refugees, (generally) doing a decent job on peacekeeping."
But criticism continued to come down on the world organization over Syria.
Ban did assign three personal envoys to handle the crisis -- the first two resigned in hopelessness.
The Security Council, divided over the Syrian conflict, has been ineffectual.
In his speech during the high-profile annual General Debate in the UN General Assembly this past September, Ban lamented an even longer-running problem, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
"Ten years lost to illegal settlement expansion," said the UN chief. "Ten years lost to intra-Palestinian divide, growing polarization and hopelessness. This is madness. Replacing a two-state solution with a one-state construct would spell doom: denying Palestinians their freedom and rightful future, and pushing Israel further from its vision of a Jewish democracy towards greater global isolation."
He immediately met vociferous Israeli opposition to that statement.