Yahoo – AFP,
Jennie Matthew, 7 June 2014
![]() |
Sigrid
Kaag, the head of the international mission overseeing the destruction of
Syria's chemical weapons at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, on
June 4, 2014 (AFP Photo/Timothy A. Clary)
|
United
Nations (United States) (AFP) - The diplomat ridding the world of Syria's
chemical weapons is Sigrid Kaag, a statuesque and impeccably dressed mother of
four who speaks six languages and is fearless in a war zone.
For nine months
she has led the international mission to destroy Damascus's declared chemical
agents, braving mortar fire, jetting between the Middle East, Europe and New
York, and liaising with Moscow, Washington and maritime fleets.
Syria may
have missed deadlines but with 93 percent of its declared chemical arsenal out
of the country, Kaag is responsible for the only glimmer of good news to emerge
from the horror of a war that has killed more than 160,000.
Her star is
in the ascendancy at UN headquarters, abuzz with praise for the woman who at
UNICEF worked with Jordan's Queen Rania and once dreamed of becoming a singer.
'Never
stops working'
The
52-year-old Kaag speaks fluent Arabic and diplomats say she has done an
excellent job. She is respected too in Damascus, where some have dubbed her the
"Iron Lady."
"She
never stops working and practically never sleeps," one of her local
employees confided to AFP.
What seems
certain is another big job after her mission concludes in the coming months.
The media
has touted her a possible successor to Lakhdar Brahimi as mediator on the
stalled Syrian peace process although others tip her for a different post in
the region.
She quashes
any suggestion that a Western woman should find it difficult in the Arab world,
saying she has always been treated with respect and never in a derogatory way.
"I
think in many negotiations women have great assets," she told AFP in an
interview, dressed in a black trouser suit, red top and high heels.
"You
can bring different component parts -- be as strong and on message and
negotiate, but I think we have a wider skill set available."
Her husband
is a Palestinian former diplomat and having children who are half Arab can also
be an asset, she said.
"You're
one foot in, one foot out. But I think ultimately people judge you on the basis
of what you bring, if you're sincere, if you're committed and if you're up to
the task," she added.
'Keep
your calm'
As head of
the joint UN-Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons mission, she
manages a staff of 110.
In Damascus
she said mortars have fallen around the hotel where they live and work, and
that she sent away some staff who were unable to cope.
"You've
got to keep your composure, you've got to keep your calm and you've got to be
in the moment," she said.
"The
fact that you don't get hit, you feel blessed but you know that you're in an
active war zone."
![]() |
Sigrid Kaag, the head of
the international mission overseeing the destruction
of Syria's chemical
weapons at the United Nations Headquarters in New York,
on June 4, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Timothy A. Clary)
|
It has been
a stratospheric rise for the daughter of a music professor who moved to Egypt
to study at the American University in Cairo as an undergraduate.
She has a
masters degree from Oxford and worked in the private sector for oil giant Shell
in London for two years before joining the Dutch foreign ministry.
Kaag
decided to quit the job after meeting her husband in Jerusalem, signing up
instead to the UN Relief and Works Agency which looks after the plight of
Palestinian refugees.
In the last
20 years, she has lived in Jerusalem, Jordan, New York, Sudan and Switzerland,
adopting one child and giving birth to three more, juggling marriage with a
career.
She was
previously number three in the UN Development Programme and UNICEF director in
the Middle East and North Africa, during which she met Syria's first lady Asma
Assad.
In her
current job she has hardly taken a break. Her mother died since she moved to
Damascus and she admits it is "very difficult" to see her children,
aged 11 to 19.
Home is
currently in east Jerusalem, where the family moved last year. Do they worry
about her living in a war zone?
"They've
been very impressed by my close protection, that gave them an immediate sense
of safety," she smiled.
"They
cope but they know it's finite and I've underlined that."
She
describes herself as "results oriented" and with nerves of steel.
"I
don't panic easily," she said. The rare exception being during a near
crash on a tiny charter plane years ago.
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