China's Qu elected new FAO Director-General

Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-23 23:12:45|Editor: Mu Xuequan
Video PlayerClose

ITALY-ROME-FAO-NEW DIRECTOR-GENERAL-CHINA-QU DONGYU

Qu Dongyu, newly-elected Director-General of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), speaks during the 41st FAO Conference in Rome, Italy, June 23, 2019. Qu Dongyu, China's vice minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, was elected as new Director-General of FAO here on Sunday. Qu will officially take the post of new FAO chief starting on Aug. 1. (Xinhua/Alberto Lingria)

by Alessandra Cardone

ROME, June 23 (Xinhua) -- Qu Dongyu, China's vice minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, was elected as new Director-General of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) here on Sunday.

Qu, 56, was chosen during the ongoing 41st FAO Conference, the highest governing body of the Rome-based agency.

The Chinese candidate received a large majority of 108 votes, winning over French Catherine Geslain-Laneelle, who received 71 votes, and Georgian Davit Kirvalidze, who got 12 votes.

"As FAO new DG, I will be committed to the original inspiration, mandate, and mission of the organization," Qu told the conference in a short address immediately after being elected.

"(I will) Take my responsibility at the supervision of conferences ... in a rule-based approach, and I will uphold the principles of openness, justice, and transparency, remaining impartial and neutral."

He also pledged to remain committed at the best of his efforts to working "for the people and the farmers" during his four-year mandate.

From the delegates of all FAO's 194 member states involved in the voting, a total of 191 votes were cast on Sunday, and one abstention was registered.

Qu will officially start in the new post on Aug. 1, and he will be the first Chinese national to serve as FAO Director-General in the history of the agency.

He will succeed Brazilian Jose Graziano Da Silva, who has served as the agency's top official for two consecutive four-year terms since being first elected in 2011.

Qu became vice minister at the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs in 2015. Before that, Qu had worked at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences headquartered in Beijing between 2001 and 2008.

The election took place during the second day of the FAO Conference, which gathers twice a year. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization was founded in 1945, and it comprises of 194 member states, plus one member organization (the European Union) and two associate members (the Faroe Islands and Tokelau).

China has joined the organization since its inception, and has long been a major contributor to the agency's activities and especially to FAO's South-South Cooperation Program.

According to the agency, FAO specific activities in China focus on five priorities, including strengthening capacity for quality and safety management of agricultural products, boosting capacity to respond to diseases, climate change and natural disasters, and promoting sustainable agro-ecological development.

This 41st session of the FAO conference opened on June 22 and would last through June 29.

KEY WORDS:
YOU MAY LIKE
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011105091381671811