Jan Pronk

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Jan Pronk (left) with Robert Zoellick
Jan Pronk (left) with Robert Zoellick

Johannes "Jan" Pieter Pronk (born 16 March 1940 in Scheveningen, The Hague) is a Dutch politician and diplomat. He was the Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of Mission for the United Nations Mission in Sudan, a mandate that expired at the end of 2006. He is now a Professor of Theory and Practice of International Development at ISS, the Institute of Social Studies, at The Hague.

He has served several terms as a member of the Dutch parliament for the social-democratic PvdA, held a number of ministerial positions, and has also pursued a career in international politics in the United Nations. In his current role at the UN he is regularly in the news in connection with the Darfur conflict.

Contents

[edit] Life

[edit] Life before politics

Jan Pronk was born in to a conservative Protestant family, his parents being members of the conservative current within the Dutch Reformed Church. His father was a school teacher from Scheveningen. Pronk attended a Protestant elementary school. He graduated from gymnasium at Protestant Zandvliet lyceum in the Hague in 1958, specializing in science.

He continued to study economics at the Nederlandse Economische hogeschool in Rotterdam, graduating in 1964. As a student, he worked as a guide on the Henri Dunant, the Dutch Red Cross's holiday ship for the disabled. He was a member of the Christian-Historical Youth Organisation, the youth organisation of the conservative Protestant Christian Historical Union party and president of the Protestant fraternity S.S.R..

In 1965 Pronk became research-assistant of Professor Jan Tinbergen at the Centre for Development Planning and later he became associate professor at the Dutch Economic Institute. In this period he also became an active member of the social-democratic PvdA, between 1966 and 1971 he was chairman of the Krimpen aan de Lek-branch of the party. He became active in the development cooperation-movement, serving as chairman of the "X-Y"-movement: an alternative Dutch development cooperation fund.

[edit] Political life

In 1971 Pronk was elected into the Lower house of the Dutch parliament for the Labour Party. He was shadow minister for development cooperation in the leftwing shadow cabinet of PvdA, D66 and PPR. He served secretary of the committe Mansholt, a committee of these three parties on the implications of the Limits to Growth-report for the Netherlands. He was re-elected in 1972. In 1973 he became Minister of Development Cooperation in the cabinet Den Uyl. He radically changed the development cooperation-policy of the Netherlands, giving it a political goal: the equal distribution of power and wealth in the world. The development cooperation policy became oriented towards the New International Economic Order, in which developing countries would become self-reliant. In 1975 1,5% of the domestic product was spent on development aid. His proposal to include communist states as Cuba and North Yemen as recipient countries of Dutch development aid, led to some controversy, but he put his proposal through. His policy supported liberation movement in Southern Africa. Because of his many international travels, he often fell asleep at Cabinet meetings, which lasted until very late in the night. His leftwing policy put him at odds with the more moderate PvdA Minister of Foreign Affairs Max van der Stoel.

In 1977 he returned to Parliament. He combined this period in Parliament with several posts in the world of development cooperation: in 1979 he also became Professor of International Development at the Institute of Social Studies; he was a member of the committee "Church Participation in Development" of the World Council of Churches and of the Councils Commission of Advisors on Economic Affairs; he was a member of the International Commission for the Study of Communication Problems of UNESCO; and in the Netherlands he was member of the Council for Government and Social Affairs of the Dutch Reformed Church. In 1978 he became Knight in the Order of the Dutch Lion. In 1980 he left Parliament to become Assistant Secretary-General of the UNCTAD. In 1985 he was Assistant UN Secretary-General.

Pronk was re-elected to Parliament in 1986. In 1987 he was co-writer of the report "Moving Panels" in which the PvdA moderated its policies. Although he was originally asked to become Minister of Defense he returned to the post of development cooperation in the third cabinet Lubbers in 1989]. For the first year, he combined this post with a position as Professor at the University of Amsterdam, where he occupied the Joop den Uyl chair, created by the scientific foundation of the PvdA. During his period as minister of development cooperation he sought to combine economic and social development, with environmental protection. In 1992 his criticism of Indonesian government's record on human rights, caused the Indonesian government to refuse development aid from the Netherlands ever since. In 1993 he was asked to become Deputy UN Secretary-General, but he refused. After the 1994 elections he remained Minister of Development Cooperation, now in the first cabinet Kok.

In 1998 he again became a minister in the second cabinet Kok but he switched to Minister of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment. During this period he focused on sustainable development. In 2000 a fire works depot exploded in the neighbourhood of Enschede. As minister he was responsible for this event, although there was considerable controversy surrounding the disaster he did not step down. In 2000 he was the Dutch candidate for the post of High Commissioner for Refugees, a post which was taken by another Dutchman, former prime minister Ruud Lubbers. In 2000 and 2001 he chaired the UN climate conference, where parties agreed upon a compliance mechanism for the Kyoto protocol for the reduction of greenhouse gases. In 2002 when the report on the Dutch involvement in the Srebrenica massacre was published, it became clear that the Dutchbat peacekeeping force had been unable to prevent the massacre. On April 10, Pronk announced that he would step down as minister because he felt politically responsible. On April 16, the entire Kok second Cabinet stepped down. In 2002 the Labour Party lost half its seats; Pronk was re-elected to Parliament, but he refused the position, because he wanted new faces to enter Parliament. In December 2002, he became Officer in the Order of Oranje-Nassau.

During his political life, Pronk was known as principled politician. Prime Minister Kok called him the "Minister for the national conscience". Because he was minister for over 17 years, he came to be known as "minister by profession".

[edit] International Political Life

Since 2002 Pronk has held several positions in the United Nations.

In 2002 he came Special UN envoy to the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Tokyo. He moderated discussions on water, hygiene, the environment and biodiversity. In 2003 he chaired the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council.

In 2003 he returned to the Institute of Social Studies as professor theory and practice of development cooperation. Pronk still holds several posts in Dutch civil society. In 2004 he came into conflict with minister Verdonk (Migration & Integration), because he characterized the way she sent asylum-seekers out of the country as "deportation".

[edit] Special representative for Sudan

In June 2004 Pronk was appointed UN Special Representative for Sudan by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan

On September 21, 2006, Pronk asked the warring parties in Darfur, including President Omar al-Bashir and the seven rebel movements, to observe a "month of tranquility" during Ramadan, which would begin September 23, 2006. His implicit call for a ceasefire in the western region of Sudan came after the Khartoum government withdrew its ultimatum for African Union peacekeepers to pull out. Other African states then agreed to extend their mandate until the end of 2006. By Pronk's request, they would finish the collision course, which would mean no fighting, no bombing, no changes of heart. Such a lull would help "create an atmosphere" for a new round of negotiations. The peace deal was "in a coma": not dead but dying. In addition the rejectionist factions should end the quarrel to start talking about everything related to the Darfur peace agreement to improve it.[1]

In mid-October 2006, the army of Sudan accused Pronk of "waging psychological warfare on the armed forces" and demanded his deportation after Pronk published thoughts on army military defeats in his weblog.[2] On 22 October, the Sudanese government gave Pronk three days' notice to leave the country.[3] He left Sudan the next day (October 23) when UN Secretary General Kofi Annan recalled him to New York for consultations.[4] On October 27 the UN Security Council and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan announce that Pronk will serve out his last months as Special Representative of the Secretary-general in Sudan.[5]

Pronk's story roughly parallels that of Mukesh Kapila, a previous UN employee who was forced to leave Sudan after making critical comments about the Darfur conflict.

[edit] Private Life

Pronk is married and has two adult children.

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] External links

Government offices
Preceded by
Kees Boertien
Minister of Development Cooperation
May 11, 1973December 19, 1977
Succeeded by
Jan de Koning
Preceded by
Piet Bukman
Minister of Development Cooperation
November 7, 1989August 3, 1998
Succeeded by
Eveline Herfkens
Preceded by
Margreeth de Boer
Minister of Housing, Spatial Planning, and Environment
August 3, 1998July 22, 2002
Succeeded by
Henk Kamp
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
?
Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations for the Sudan
August 1, 2004December 31, 2006
Succeeded by
Jan Eliasson



Persondata
NAME Pronk, Jan
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Pronk, Johannes Pieter (full name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION Dutch politician
DATE OF BIRTH 16 March 1940
PLACE OF BIRTH The Hague, Netherlands
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH