Kofi Annan photograph

Kofi Annan

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Gender Male
Death6 years ago
Date of birth April 8,1938
Zodiac sign Aries
Born Kumasi
Ghana
Date of died August 18,2018
DiedBern
Switzerland
Spouse Nane Maria Annan
Titi Alakija
Nane Annan
Children Kojo Annan
Ama Annan
Nina Cronstedt de Groot
Height 175 (cm)
Job Actor
Diplomat
Politician
Author
Economist
Awards J. William Fulbright Prize for International Understanding
Indira Gandhi Prize
Profile in Courage Award
Order of the Star of Romania
Nobel Peace Prize
Fulbright Prize
Education MIT Sloan School of Management
NationalityGhanaian
Full nameKofi Atta Annan
Previous positionSecretary-General of the United Nations (1997–2006)
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID418048

Interventions: A Life in War and Peace
We the Peoples: A UN for the Twenty-First Century
Confronting Anti-Semitism
The quotable Kofi Annan
The question of intervention
We the Peoples-- : Nobel Peace Message
Annual Report on the Work of the Organization: 2001
Basic Facts About the United Nations
Preventing War and Disaster: A Growing Global Challenge
Partnerships for Global Community: Annual Report on the Work of the Organization, 1998
Global Values: The United Nations and the Rule of Law in the 21st Century
Common Destiny, New Resolve: Annual Report on the Work of the Organization, 2000
In Larger Freedom: Towards Development, Security and Human Rights for All : Executive Summary of the Report of the Secretary-General
Yangtze: The Long River
Dag Hammarskjöld and the 21st Century
Dialogue Among Civilizations: The Round Table on the Eve of the United Nations Millennium Summit, Organized by UNESCO and the United Nations with the Support of the Islamic Republic of Iran
We the Children: Meeting the Promises of the World Summit for Children
Dialogue of Civilizations and the Need for a World Ethic: A Lecture Given in the Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford, on 28 June 1999
We the Peoples: The Role of the United Nations in the 21st Century
Internet Governance: A Grand Collaboration : an Edited Collection of Papers Contributed to the United Nations ICT Task Force Global Forum on Internet Governance, New York, March 25-26, 2004
The World Conferences: Developing Priorities for the 21st Century
Letters to Future Generations: Original Texts
The Collected Papers of Kofi Annan, Un Secretary-General, 1997-2006
Confronting Anti‑Semitism
Pandemic: Facing AIDS
Prevention of Armed Conflict
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Kofi Annan Life story


Kofi Atta Annan was a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh secretary-general of the United Nations from 1997 to 2006. Annan and the UN were the co-recipients of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize.

George Alagiah: BBC journalist and newsreader dies aged 67

Apr 29,2024 10:07 am

George Alagiah , one of The Bbc 's longest-serving and most respected journalists, has died at 67, nine years after being diagnosed with cancer.

He was a fixture on British TV news for More Than three decades, presenting The Bbc News at Six for The Past 20 years.

Before that, he was an award-winning Foreign Correspondent , reporting from countries ranging from Rwanda to Iraq.

He was diagnosed with stage four bowel cancer in 2014 and revealed in October 2022 that it had spread further.

Alagiah won awards for reports on The Famine and war in Somalia in The early 1990s, and was nominated for a Bafta in 1994 for covering Saddam Hussein 's genocidal campaign against The Kurds of northern Iraq.

He was also named Amnesty International 's journalist of The year in 1994, for reporting on The Civil War in Burundi, and was The First BBC journalist to report on The genocide in Rwanda.

George Maxwell Alagiah was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka before moving to Ghana And Then England in childhood.

His main Childhood Memory of Sri Lanka was leaving it. His parents were Christian Tamils; The country, then called Ceylon, mired in ethnic violence.

His father, Donald, was an engineer specialising in water distribution and irrigation. Feeling unwelcome and unsafe in his own land, he took his Young Family to Africa In Search of a new and better life.

The Family initially prospered there but Alagiah's parents decided to educate their children in England when a coup soured The atmosphere in Ghana. At The Age Of 11, his father dropped him off at Boarding School in Portsmouth; they both had to Hold Back The Tears .

His childhood of change and assimilation helped shape his personality and informed his professional judgement.

There was some racism. He was almost The only boy of colour; there were " Bongo Bongo land" taunts in The Showers . He gave up asking people to say his name correctly (His Family pronounced it, " Uller-hiya" ).

" In Those Days , " he reflected " you were almost apologetic if you had a 'funny name'. " The Alternative was to stick out like an " exotic cactus in a bed of spring meadow plants. "

But, in some ways, his school in England - St John's College - was a closed and unreal society, which sealed him off from The huge social changes going on outside its walls. The anti-immigrant sentiment in many parts of The country was something that largely passed him by.

People would often compare his looks to Omar Sharif . What they really meant, he later wrote, was that he was educated and nicely spoken, albeit with brown skin.

He had become, he believed, The " right sort" of foreigner in a land where " class trumps race every time".

Later, at attended Durham University , where he met and later married, Frances Roberthan.

After graduating, he spent seven years at South Magazine, proud of its editorial line which painted an unequal world as an unstable one.

He joined The Bbc as a Foreign Affairs correspondent in 1989 And Then became Africa correspondent, The Continent of his childhood.

It was often a depressing experience. He interviewed child soldiers in Liberia, victims of mass rape in Uganda and witnessed hunger and disease almost everywhere.

" There is a New Generation in Africa" he wrote, " My Generation , freedom's children, born and educated in those years of euphoria after independence, we have had a chance. We didn't do much with it. "

One of his proudest professional moments came when he broadcast some of The First pictures of The Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo in 1999, He Said .

Other stories he covered in news reports and documentaries included The Trade In human organs in India, Street Children in Brazil, Civil War in Afghanistan and Human Rights violations in Ethiopia.

He interviewed figures including South African President Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu , Un Secretary General Kofi Annan and President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe.

Moving to news presenting, he fronted The Bbc One O'Clock News, Nine O'Clock News and Bbc Four News, before being made one of The main presenters of The Six O'Clock News in 2003.

He anchored news programmes from Sri Lanka following The December 2004 tsunami, as well as reporting from New Orleans in The Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina , and from Pakistan following The South Asian earthquake in 2005.

He was appointed an OBE for services to journalism in 2008.

After Alagiah's initial cancer diagnosis in 2014, The disease spread to his liver and lymph nodes, which needed chemotherapy and several operations, including one to remove most of his liver.

He Said he was a " richer person" for The Experience upon returning to presenting in 2015, and said working in The Newsroom was " such an important part of keeping energised and motivated".

He had to take several further breaks from work to have treatment, and he thought The cancer would " probably get me in The end" but that he still felt " very lucky".

Speaking on The Desperately Seeking Wisdom podcast in 2022, He Said that when his cancer was first discovered, it took a while for him to understand what he " needed to do".

" I had to stop and say, 'Hang on a minute. If The full stop came now, would My Life have been a failure?'

" And actually, when I look back and I looked at My Journey . . The Family I had, The opportunities My Family had, The Great Good Fortune to bump into [Frances Robathan], who's now been My Wife and lover for all these years, The Kids that we brought up. . it didn't feel like a failure. "

Alagiah had Two Children with Frances.

What are bowel cancer symptoms?

Most people with these symptoms do not have bowel cancer, but The NHS advice is to see your GP if you have one or more of The symptoms and they have persisted for More Than four weeks.

And if you, or someone you know, have been affected by cancer, information and support is available on

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Source of news: bbc.com

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