António Guterres became the 10th UN High Commissioner for Refugees on June 15, 2005. A former Portuguese prime minister, Guterres was elected by the UN General Assembly to a five-year term. In April 2010, the General Assembly re-elected Guterres to a second five-year term.
As High Commissioner, he heads one of the world's foremost humanitarian
organizations. UNHCR has twice won the Nobel Peace Prize. Its more than
6,800 staff members work in more than 120 countries providing protection
and assistance to millions of refugees, returnees, internally displaced
people and stateless persons. More than 85 per cent of its staff work
in the field, often in difficult and dangerous duty stations. UNHCR's
needs-based budget for 2010 is just over US$3 billion.
Before
joining UNHCR, Guterres spent more than 20 years in government and
public service. He served as Portuguese prime minister from 1995 to
2002, during which time he was heavily involved in the international
effort to resolve the crisis in East Timor. As president of the European
Council in early 2000, he led the adoption of the so-called Lisbon
Agenda and co-chaired the first European Union-Africa summit. He also
founded the Portuguese Refugee Council in 1991 and was part of the
Council of State of Portugal from 1991 to 2002.
From 1981 to
1983, Guterres was a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe, as well as chairman of the Committee on Demography,
Migration and Refugees. In addition, he has been active in Socialist
International, a worldwide organization of social democratic political
parties. He was the group's vice-president from 1992 to 1999 and
president from 1999 until mid-2005.
Guterres was born on April
30, 1949, in Lisbon and educated at the Instituto Superior Técnico,
where he remains a visiting professor.
He is married and has two children.