UN chief appoints Norwegian diplomat as his new envoy for Syria
31 October 2018
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has appointed veteran Norwegian diplomat Geir O. Pedersen as his next
Special Envoy for Syria.
Mr. Pedersen succeeds Staffan de Misutra, who announced earlier this month that he will be stepping down in November
after serving as the UN chief’s top envoy for the war-battered nation for over four years.
According to a note issued by the Secretary-General’s office, Mr. Pedersen “brings to the position decades of political
and diplomatic experience”, having served both in Government and UN capacities, including as Norway’s Ambassador to
China since last year and as Permanent Representative to the UN for five years, from 2012.
At the UN, Mr. Pedersen served as the Special Coordinator for Lebanon between 2007 and 2008, and before that, was
Personal Representative of the Secretary-General for Southern Lebanon. He was also Director of Asia-Pacific Division at
the Department of Political Affairs.
Born in Oslo on 28 September 1955, he is married and has five children. The UN chief also expressed his “deepest
gratitude” to Mr. de Mistura, an Italian national, for his “concerted efforts and contributions to the search for peace
in Syria.”
Appointed the Special Envoy in July 2014, Mr. de Mistura continued to work with all parties involved in the Syrian
conflict to push for lasting peace, in line with Security Council resolution 2254, which endorsed a Syrian-led,
Syrian-owned roadmap towards peace.
Though his tenure coincided with the bloodiest period of the crisis, with warring sides employing “medieval sieges”,
barrel bombs, human shields and snipers in densely populated civilian areas, an undeterred de Mistura continued to push
all sides in the conflict to adhere to the peace roadmap as well as urging that world leaders seize any “window of
opportunity” to end the war.
The crisis in Syria, which started with largely peaceful protests against President Assad in March 2011, has so far
claimed over 400,000 lives and driven some 11.7 million people from their homes, including over 5.5 million to seek
refuge into neighbouring countries.
ends