The selection process was launched last November, with each candidate to be formally nominated by a state or group of states, not necessarily by their country of origin. TheSecurity Councilmust begin the selection process by the end of July.
UN General Assembly spokeswoman La Neice Collins confirmed Burundi's nomination of Sall on Monday.
Burundi currently chairs the African Union (AU), and a source close to Sall told French news agency AFP that during Sall's time as president of the AU, fromFebruary 2022 to February 2023, his priority "was to carry Africa's voice within international bodies".
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Other candidates
The current composition of the Council could be favourable to Sall, as three African members are sitting on it this year the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia and Somalia.
While the entire Security Council will elect the next secretary-general, its five permanent members France, the United Kingdom, China, the United States, and Russia will ultimate be the deciders, as they have power of veto.
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Two other candidates have been formally nominated: former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet and Argentine diplomat Rafael Grossi, who currently heads the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Costa Rica has also put forward its former vice president Rebeca Grynspan, but her letter of candidacy has not yet been officially submitted to the UN.
Senegal ex-president Sall 'could face charges' following public finances report
Controversy in Senegal
Sall led the West African nation from 2012 to 2024. The current government accuses him of covering up unfavourable economic data and concealing the true extent of the country's fiscal problems.
Senegal charged four former government ministers from Sall's cabinet withcorruption and embezzlement related to the management of Covid-19 funds under a wider anti-corruption campaign byPresidentBassirou Diomaye Faye.
(with newswires, and partially adapted fromthis report in French.)
Originally published on RFI



















