UN General Assembly elects Bangladesh’s Rahman as next president
In a secret-ballot election, Mr. Rahman secured 99 votes to Mr. Kakouris’s 91. A total of 190 ballots were cast, with no invalid votes or abstentions.The presidency rotates among the UN’s five regional groups, and the 81st session falls to the Asia-Pacific group. Mr. Rahman will serve a one-year term starting on 8 September.
His presidency will coincide with one of the most consequential processes on the UN calendar: the selection of Secretary-General António Guterres’s successor, whose term ends on 31 December 2026.Mr. Rahman brings more than four decades of diplomatic and multilateral experience to the role. Bangladesh’s Foreign Minister since February, he previously served as National Security Adviser and High Representative on the Rohingya Issue. A career diplomat, he joined Bangladesh’s foreign service in 1979. He also held senior UN positions in New York and Geneva.‘With humility and respect’Accepting the position, Mr. Rahman said he was taking on the role “with humility and respect” at a moment when confidence in the international system was under strain.“The UN will commence its ninth decade at a time when trust in our organization is being tested on multiple fronts,” he told Member States.“Taken together, these challenges tend to undermine the public trust and confidence in the ability of our organization to deliver its promises.”A world under pressureThe election comes amid what the current General Assembly President Annalena Baerbock described as an exceptionally difficult period for multilateral diplomacy.Addressing Member States after the vote, Ms. Baerbock said the UN was facing “not only headwinds, but immense pressure,” with consensus increasingly difficult to achieve and defence of the UN Charter becoming “a daily necessity.”“The role of the president of the General Assembly is no longer simply procedural,” she said.










