ex-Moonie at the UN - good news for Pyongyang?

Guardian (London) - November 6, 2006

UN to appoint former Moonie as head of World Food Programme John Hooper in Rome and Ed Pilkington in New York

Kofi Annan will this week put a former leading “Moonie” in charge of
the UN’s biggest humanitarian aid agency after vigorous lobbying by
the Bush administration.

Josette Sheeran is to be appointed executive director of the UN World
Food Programme (WFP), according to diplomatic and UN sources.

Ms Sheeran, also known by her married name Shiner, was a member of
the Rev Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church for more than 20 years.
She became one of its most influential figures as managing editor of
the Washington Times newspaper, which was founded by Mr Moon.

A US state department spokesman said last week that Ms Sheeran, the
under-secretary of state for economic, business and agricultural
affairs, was “our candidate”. He acknowledged that a pamphlet
circulated in support of her application had been funded by US
taxpayers and said Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, had
“made phone calls in support of Josette’s candidacy”.

The spokesman told the Guardian that Ms Sheeran had not been a
member, or had any association with, the Moonies for more than a
decade and that it had no bearing on her work. “In America, we regard
religion as a private matter,” he said.

However, in Rome, where WFP has its headquarters, some officials
privately expressed concern. “She has never distanced herself from
the views of this group which, given its extreme nature, you would
think was appropriate,” said one. He referred to Mr Moon’s claims
that the Holocaust was a result of the death of Jesus. “It’s
sufficiently bizarre to warrant an explanation - that, and the
duration of her involvement.”

Her departure from the Unification Church was reported by the
Washington Post in 1997, which said Ms Sheeran had been worshipping
at an Episcopal (Anglican) church for the previous 18 months.

Any perceived link between the Moonies and WFP is particularly
sensitive because of the agency’s role on the Korean peninsula. Since
the mid-1990s WFP, the UN’s leading supplier of food aid, has handed
the communist-ruled North hundreds of millions of dollars worth of food.

Mr Moon, who was born in what is now North Korea, has close ties with
the communist regime despite being a fervent anti-Marxist. Companies
associated with the Unification Church own two hotels in Pyongyang,
the capital, and a car assembly plant. In 1991, Mr Moon visited the
country’s then dictator, Kim Il-sung. The next year, Ms Sheeran
became the first US reporter in 20 years to interview the “Great
Leader”. She described him as “presenting the image of a self- confident, reflective elder statesman rather than the reclusive,
dogmatic dictator he is usually portrayed as in the west”.

Ms Sheeran joined the Moonies as a young woman. She married another
member of the Unification Church, Whitney Shiner, who trained at its
Theological Seminary. They are now divorced and Mr Shiner, a
Washington professor, has also left the group. In 2001, she entered
the US administration as an associate trade representative.

WFP’s executive directors are chosen by the UN secretary general and
the director-general of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO), notionally in consultation with the WFP board. A senior
western diplomat said a provisional decision was due to be forwarded
to the board last week, but the process was held up to allow
consultation with the incoming secretary general, Ban Ki-moon of
South Korea. Mr Ban is not related to Mr Moon and is not linked to
the Unification Church.

According to a UN source, Mr Annan and FAO director-general Jacques
Diouf had discarded Ms Sheeran before Mr Ban’s intervention. But this
was denied by other UN and diplomatic sources in New York and Rome,
who said she was the first choice. The WFP board is due to meet this
week to approve the decision.

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