Andrew James GilmourCMG (born March 1964) is CEO of the Berghof Foundation and author of The Burning Question: Climate and Conflict - Why Does It Matter.[1][2] He was formerly United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, until 2019, and also served as Director for Political, Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Human Rights affairs in the Executive Office of the Secretary-General, from 2012 to 2016.[3]
An environmentalist since joining the WWF at the age of 10,[4] he has published articles on the links between climate change, environmental degradation, human rights and conflict for Bloomberg[5] and Frankfurter Allgememeine Zeitung.[6]
He is married to medical doctor and author Emma Williams.
Education
Gilmour was educated at Eton and Balliol College, Oxford, where he read Modern History and won the Gladstone Memorial Prize (1986) for his thesis on The Changing Reactions of the British press to Mussolini, 1935–40.[7] He undertook a master's degree at the London School of Economics in Government and International Relations in 1986–87.[citation needed]
Gilmour joined the United Nations in 1989 and worked in Afghanistan, Iraq, South Sudan, the Middle East, West Africa, and the Balkans. In 2016, Secretary-GeneralBan Ki-moon appointed him UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights,[9] a post he held for over three years until the end of 2019, when he left the UN aged 55. During this period he was assigned the role of UN system-wide focal point for dealing with reprisals and intimidation that are carried out, usually by Governments, against individuals or NGOs who have cooperated with or seek to cooperate with the UN on human rights issues. He was a vocal defender of human rights activists who are under growing threats and pressure for their work.[10]
He has spoken out against human rights violations carried out against the Rohingya people of Myanmar,[11] the Palestinians,[12] the Syrian people and victims in many other countries including China, Egypt,[13] Libya[14] and the Philippines.[15][16] These followed in particular after his visits to Yemen,[17] Democratic Republic of Congo,[18] South Sudan,[19] Kenya, Liberia,[20] Mali,[21] Burkina Faso, Central African Republic,[22] Afghanistan,[23] Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Honduras,[24] and Colombia.[25]
He has also been an advocate in favour of LGBT rights,[26] victims of torture, rape survivors especially among the Yazidis and Rohingya, and indigenous peoples' rights.[27]
Gilmour published a short history of the UN's involvement in the Middle East from 1945 to 2015.[29] He has also published in the Financial Times,[30] the New York Times,[31]the Guardian,[32]Bloomberg,[33]The Economist,[34]The Scotsman,[35]The Nation,[36] and other world publications, including in Africa[37] and Latin America.[38]
He also published "The future of human rights: A view from the UN", in the Journal of Ethics and International Affairs.[39]
^Gilmour, A. (2016). 'The Role of the Secretary-General', Chapter 1 in Makdisi, K & Prashad, V (eds.) Land of Blue Helmets: The United Nations and the Arab World. Berkeley: University of California Press
^Gilmour, A. (2014). The Future of Human Rights: A View from the United Nations. Ethics & International Affairs,28(2), 239-250. doi:10.1017/S0892679414000240