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UNICEF'S
OUTGOING DIRECTOR Carol
Bellamy
The key is to focus on tomorrow
Carol Bellamy has witnessed her share of horrors as
head of the United Nations children's agency for the past 10 years, from
traumatized Iraqi children to starving Sudanese babies to frightened
tsunami orphans. Through it all, she says, she's tried to push forward.
“You can't just stand there and be helpless,” she says. “You have to do
something.” The 63-year-old executive director of United Nations
Children's Fund, or UNICEF, who leaves her post April 30, recently
returned from Asia's tsunami-devastated regions. Of more than 150,000
people killed, more than a third are believed to be children, and
countless more were orphaned. She says she deals with the suffering she
witnesses by taking action. “Are we doing something, are we doing
enough, can we do more?” she says she constantly asks. In an interview
with The Associated Press in her office overlooking the East River last
week, Bellamy spoke of concentrating UNICEF's attention on disease
prevention, rebuilding schools, and finding ways to make children happy
again.
An example of the latter: In Sri Lanka, Bellamy said
she saw a boy happily playing with a cricket bat handed out by
volunteers — an image of progress that sticks with her. “Maybe later he
was crying and feeling terrible again, but he was at least laughing at
that point, he was OK at that point,” she said. Bellamy has always tried
to look beyond adversity. As a schoolgirl growing up in New Jersey, if
she did badly on a test, her response was “to repress that and go on to
the next one.” She made that comment in 1985 after losing to Ed Koch in
the New York City mayor's race. She was the first woman to run for City
Hall, after several years as the first woman president of the City
Council. “I just go on to the next thing,” she said at the time. Not
that Bellamy isn't shaken by the hardship she encounters as executive
director of UNICEF, overseeing more than 7,000 people in more than 150
countries.
Touring villages nearly swept away by the tsunami, she
recalled she was stopped cold by their eerie silence — areas that were
once bustling, but now “so quiet because everyone was gone.” Under her
leadership, Bellamy says, UNICEF has strengthened its capacity to
respond rapidly to emergencies like the tsunami, and has emphasized
restoring normalcy and routine — like schooling — in disrupted
communities. The organization also has increased support for fighting
the HIV/AIDS pandemic and child violence and exploitation, she said. “It
was a great organization when I came here,” said Bellamy, who talks fast
and gestures excitedly with her hands. “But I think I've strengthened it
and made it more relevant.”
She's not without critics. The Lancet, a respected
British medical journal, recently wrote that she had misdirected
UNICEF's attention toward children's rights and away from children's
health. Bellamy said the criticism was unfounded because such basic
children's issues cannot be separated. “You don't say, 'We're doing
rights, not health,' or 'We're doing rights, not education,'” she said.
“It's all connected.”
Bellamy arrived at the job in 1995 from a post as
director of the Peace Corps under former President Bill Clinton, 30
years after she'd served as a volunteer for the organization in
Guatemala. As a volunteer, she taught families to boil water to prevent
disease, and promoted immunizations and the building of latrines —
lessons of child survival that are the building blocks for the work she
now promotes at UNICEF. Clinton paid tribute to Bellamy last week, as it
was announced that she'd be replaced after two five-year terms — the
maximum under term limits — by outgoing Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman. “Carol has been a strong and effective voice on behalf of the
world's most vulnerable children, leading the fight against poverty,
disease, abuse and discrimination,” he said in a statement.
Donna Shalala, secretary of health and human services
under Clinton and a longtime Bellamy friend, described her as “funny,
intense and smart,” and told the AP that “people have always
underestimated her skill because she doesn't have a huge ego, and she
has always put children first.” Single and with no children of her own,
Bellamy is looking forward to her new job: heading the Brattleboro,
Vt.-based World Learning and its School for International Training. The
group prepares students and professionals to work in international
development. “It lets me stay involved, in a small way, in trying to
improve cross-cultural understanding,” Bellamy said. “This is a small
world and we don't all have to love each other, but a little bit more
tolerance would be useful.”
26 January 2005
http://www.nynewsday.com/news/local/manhattan/ny-bc-ny--unicef-carolbella0123jan23,0,3973680.story?coll=nyc-moreny-headlines
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