Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow


Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow, GCIH is a Senegalese educator. Born in Dakar, M'bow served in France and North Africa during World War II after volunteering for the French army, serving in the French Army, with the Free French, and finally in the French Air Force. After the end of the war he studied geography at the Sorbonne University in Paris.
M'bow began working for UNESCO in 1953 and was the director-general from 1974 to 1987, being the first black African to head a United Nations support organisation. He called the Commission over the Problems of Communication which delivered the MacBride Report in May 1980, supporting international claims for a New World Information and Communication Order. His departure in 1987 followed criticism for administrative and budgetary practices and the US withdrawal from UNESCO in 1984. M'Bow was regularly criticized for losing sight of UNESCO's original goals, and accused of turning the organization into a vehicle of anti-American propaganda.
In 1980, M'Bow was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Belgrade.
In 1984, for his refusal to be dictated to, Government of the United States announced its intention to withdraw from UNESCO. American newspaper columnist Flora Lewis, writing his opinion in The New York Times, described the organization as "a totally politicized, demoralized bureaucracy whose chief concern is to provide cushy jobs for politicians unwanted at home and a forum for attacking the very concepts Unesco was supposed to serve - human rights for all, press freedom, unrestricted access to culture." Lewis described M'Bow himself as "an ambitious man who has cultivated back-scratching to a fine art".However, in a report after a decade has passed since his term in UNESCO, M'Bow became the best Director-General of the organization according to statistics gathered during his term.
M'Bow retired to his home country of Senegal in 1987.

Honours