Switzerland mourns 'visionary and friend' Kofi Annan

AFP  |  Geneva 

As tributes flooded in from around the world today for former UN Kofi Annan, mourned a "visionary" who helped bolster his adopted home's position as an international diplomatic hub.

In Switzerland, where he settled after completing his second term, is meanwhile widely remembered for his many deep friendships and for his contributions to securing the status of the country and especially of as a centre for world diplomacy.

"was a visionary and a great friend of Switzerland," Swiss tweeted out shortly after the announcement yesterday.

"Today, International has lost one of its most ardent advocates," he added.

The of the in Geneva, Michael Moller, meanwhile lamented that "humanity has lost its strong moral voice, and I lost my mentor, my role model and great friend."

Annan's long-running relationship with began in the early 1960s, when he obtained a degree at the and Development Studies in

Early in his four decade-long UN career, he also lived intermittently in the city, when he worked for the in the 1960s and later for in 1980.

And it was in Geneva that he met his second wife, Nane Lagergren, a Swedish at the UN. They were married in 1984.

As UN chief, was instrumental in convincing Swiss voters to allow their country to finally join the world body in 2002, according to Joseph Deiss, a former Swiss and former of the

"He played a discrete but very important role in reassuring our citizens," Deiss, a personal friend of Annan's, told the ATS agency.

"I think he had a weakness for .. He was a great friend of our country," he added.

Adolf Ogi, who was appointed by Annan as UN on Sport for Development and Peace in the early 2000s, meanwhile described him as a "tender, exceptional man".

He told that Annan, who became a good personal friend, had come to see him and hike with him for several days in the Swiss in 2000 before announcing his UN appointment.

"I only understood later that he was testing me, man to man, to see if we could work together in the UN," said.

It was perhaps after he completed his decade at the helm of the UN that Annan did the most to boost Geneva's international status.

After settling in the city, he established the Foundation there in 2007 devoted to conflict resolution.

In 2010, his family moved to the small village of in the neighbouring canton of Vaud, but he continued to accept high-level diplomatic missions from the UN and supported numerous programmes and initiatives by international organisations based in Geneva.

"He was a generous and discrete person, who wanted to prolong what he had been doing at the UN," said former Swiss Ruth Dreifuss, who received Annan's support for her global commission aimed at decriminalising drug use.

Cartoonist meanwhile told Dimanche that Annan had offered important support for his Geneva-based Cartooning For Peace foundation.

"Despite the differences in age and social milieu ... honoured me with his friendship," he said, describing him as "extremely friendly, completely authentic".

"Big men are measured by their small gestures.

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First Published: Sun, August 19 2018. 19:30 IST