Was Sri Lanka influenced to drop Dhanapala in favour of Ban Ki-moon for UN Chief post?
Saturday, 18 April 2015 00:00
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Korean newspaper reports claims by deceased Keangnam boss of urging President Rajapaksa to withdraw Lankan candidacy in 2006 election
Keangnam Enterprises Chairman Sung Woan-jong, second from left, poses with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, center, during a meeting at the Grand Hyatt Seoul, in April 2012. Both sides agreed to cooperate on infrastructure projects in the Southeast Asian country. Courtesy of Keangnam/Korea Times. Source: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/biz/2012/04/123_109906.html
www.koreatimes.co.kr: Deceased Keangnam Enterprises Chairman Sung Woan-jong claimed that he contributed considerably to the election of Ban Ki-moon as United Nations Secretary General, Sung’s associates were quoted as saying by a vernacular newspaper.
Sung claimed that he had close ties with then President Mahinda Rajapaksa, whom he urged to persuade his country’s candidate, Jayantha Dhanapala, to withdraw his candidacy and support Ban in the 2006 election for the post.
During the initial stage of the election, Thailand Deputy Prime Minister Surakiart Sathirathai and India’s Shashi Tharoor, who served as UN Under Secretary General, were cited as favourites.
After the UN Security Council conducted three straw votes but failed to choose a winner, Sri Lanka’s Dhanapala withdrew his candidacy, declaring his support for Ban, at the end of September.
Following the Sri Lankan candidate’s resignation, Ban moved to the top with 14 yes votes and one abstention from the 15 member states during the fourth straw poll on 2 October.
The General Assembly elected Ban on 13 October.
“My personal ties with the Sri Lanka President did the job,” Sung was quoted as telling his associates, according to the DongAIlbo. “I told the President to support Ban as Dhanapala seemed to have a slim chance of being elected.”
The newspaper added that Ban expressed his gratitude to Sung for his help.
Sung’s construction firm moved into Sri Lanka in 1978, engaging in housing and other infrastructure projects.
Sung was found dead on 9 April in an apparent suicide amid the prosecution’s investigation into allegations of fraud and a slush fund involving the failed “energy diplomacy” conducted under the administration of former President Lee Myung-bak.
The controversy has also impacted the UN Chief as Sung professed a special connection with Ban during a KyunghyangShinmun interview conducted right before his death.
Sung has been wielding influence in the political sector since he founded the Chungcheong Forum in 2000 with a network of politicians, public officials and journalists from the Chungcheong region. The forum has some 3,500 members.
Ban, Lee and Sung all hail from the region. Sung claimed his support for Ban as the next presidential runner would have made Lee unhappy. Lee denied that he harboured any resentment toward Ban and Sung.
Ban also denied the allegations that he and Sung had special ties.
“The ongoing case is not related to me. I saw Sung several times on official occasions such as the gathering of the Chungcheong Forum, but I don’t have personal ties with him,” he told reporters. “I have made clear that I have no interest in domestic politics.”
(Source: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2015/04/116_177279.html)