The bitter battle for top UN migration job

Amy Pope, the U.S. candidate to lead the United Nations’ migration agency, is now free to tell you what she thinks of her boss, who is also now her rival for the world’s top migration job, and the agency they both lead.

He’s old-fashioned and worst of all, doesn’t travel enough. That is a conspicuous trait for a man responsible for the fate of more than 280 million migrants. As for the Geneva-based migration agency: It has been too reactive to crises, fallen short in shaping global policy debates, and has failed to adequately anticipate migration flows before they develop into cross-border calamities.    

Pope, who recently took unpaid leave from her job at the International Organization for Migration, is heading into the final weeks of an increasingly contentious campaign to unseat her boss, António Vitorino, a Portuguese national seeking a second five-year term as head of the migration outfit. And things are getting a little heated.

This article is free to read - just register or sign in

Access news, newsletters, events and more.

Join us