Biography
BAN
KI-MOON
Ban Ki-moon of the Republic of Korea, the
eighth Secretary-General of the United Nations, brings to his post 37 years of
service both in Government and on the global stage.
Career
highlights
At the time of his election as Secretary-General,
Mr. Ban was his country's Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade. His long
tenure with the Ministry included postings in New Delhi, Washington D.C. and
Vienna, and responsibility for a variety of portfolios, including Foreign
Policy Adviser to the President, Chief National Security Adviser to the
President, Deputy Minister for Policy Planning and Director-General of American
Affairs. Throughout this service, his guiding vision was that of a peaceful
Korean peninsula, playing an expanding role for peace and prosperity in the
region and the wider world.
Mr. Ban has long-standing ties with the
United Nations, dating back to 1975, when he worked for the Foreign Ministry's
United Nations Division. That work expanded over the years, with assignments as
First Secretary at the Republic of Korea's Permanent Mission to the United
Nations in New York, Director of the United Nations Division at the Ministry's
headquarters in Seoul and Ambassador to Vienna, during which time, in 1999, he
served as Chairman of the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear
Test Ban Treaty Organization. In 2001-2002, as Chef de Cabinet during the
Republic of Korea's presidency of the General Assembly, he facilitated the
prompt adoption of the first resolution of the session, condemning the
terrorist attacks of 11 September, and undertook a number of initiatives aimed
at strengthening the Assembly's functioning, thereby helping to turn a session
that started out in crisis and confusion into one in which a number of
important reforms were adopted.
Mr. Ban has also been actively involved in
issues relating to inter-Korean relations. In 1992, as Special Adviser to the
Foreign Minister, he served as Vice-Chair of the South-North Joint Nuclear
Control Commission following the adoption of the historic Joint Declaration on
the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. In September 2005, as Foreign
Minister, he played a leading role in bringing about another landmark agreement
aimed at promoting peace and stability on the Korean peninsula with the
adoption at the six-party talks of the Joint Statement on resolving the North
Korean nuclear issue.
Education
Mr. Ban received a bachelor's degree in
international relations from Seoul National University in 1970. In 1985, he
earned a master's degree in public administration from the Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard University. In July 2008, Mr. Ban received an honorary
Doctoral Degree from Seoul National University.
Prizes
and awards
Mr. Ban has received numerous national and
international prizes, medals and honours. In 1975, 1986 and again in 2006, he
was awarded the Republic of Korea's Highest Order of Service Merit for service
to his country. In April 2008, he was awarded the dignity of the “Grand-Croix
de L'Ordre National” (Grand Cross of the National Order) in Burkina Faso, and
in the same month received the “Grand Officier de L'Ordre National” (Grand
Officer of the National Order) from the Government of Côte d'Ivoire.
Personal
Mr. Ban was born on 13 June 1944. He and
his wife, Madam Yoo (Ban) Soon-taek, whom he met in high school in 1962, have
one son and two daughters. In addition to Korean, Mr. Ban speaks English and
French.