Nigerian with US-Nigeria Dual Citizenship
in Fight with Kenya Minister Amina over WTO DG Post
Harvard-educated and longtime World Bank economist Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is bidding to
become the next director-general of the World Trade Organization under a nomination
from her native Nigeria while also holding dual U.S. citizenship.
Okonjo-Iweala obtained American citizenship in 2019, her spokeswoman told
Bloomberg News, after spending most of her career at the World Bank and living in
the Washington suburbs.
It’s not uncommon for international civil servants who spend
long stretches working abroad to take a second citizenship, especially when their
families have been living overseas with them, a spokeswoman for Okonjo-Iweala said. She’s humbled by the support of the government
of Nigeria and its people, the spokeswoman said.
Okonjo-Iweala has a resumé full of qualifications,
and there is no citizenship requirement for the job. Still, the revelation of her
dual status may become magnified as protectionist sentiment rises around the world
and national allegiances are questioned, observers of the process said.
At least two other candidates for the top WTO job disclosed
multiple nationalities on their biographies posted online by the Geneva-based organization. Okonjo-Iweala’s bio doesn’t mention dual citizenship, and there’s
no requirement to do so.
Job Vacancy
Former WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo
officially stepped down on Monday, and a total of eight people are vying for the
position. Six men have served as director-generals since its founding in 1995. Two
women -- Okonjo-Iweala and Amina Mohamed of Kenya -- have
emerged as front-runners to succeed Azevedo.
Though the Nigeria-born Okonjo-Iweala
has twice served as the country’s finance minister, she spent most of her adult
life working in America, after arriving in the 1970s to attend Harvard University.
She lived in Potomac, Maryland, where she raised four children and worked for 25
years at the World Bank.
On Tuesday she received the endorsement of Aliko Dangote,
Africa’s richest man.
Already complicating the WTO leadership race are tensions
between the U.S. and China.
China has engaged in a multiyear campaign to expand its diplomatic
influence and install key personnel at the top levels of international bodies like
the International Telecommunication Union, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture
Organization, and the International Civil Aviation Organization.
Superpower Battle
The Trump administration has sought to blunt China’s ambitions
and led
a successful effort this year to displace
a Chinese candidate to lead the World Intellectual Property Organization with a
more western-friendly candidate from Singapore.
The U.S.-China competition for global influence isn’t isolated
to the WIPO race and has already surfaced at the WTO, which the Trump administration
has rendered virtually powerless to resolve trade disputes because it wants the
organization overhauled.
At the end of July, the Chinese delegation to the WTO opposed
a U.S. proposal for an American deputy
director-general, Alan Wolff, to serve as the WTO’s interim director-general until
a permanent chief is selected. China was able to block Wolff’s interim bid because
of the organization’s tradition of decision-making by consensus -- a practice that
allows any member to veto a candidate for any reason.
A spokeswoman from the Chinese mission to the WTO was not
immediately available for comment.
WTO members were ultimately unable to select an interim leader
to steer the organization.
To be sure, a single veto from a country is not necessarily
fatal to anyone’s candidacy. While the WTO endeavors to select a candidate who is
most likely to have the consensus support of its 164 members, it also provides recourse
of voting as a last resort -- a process involving a qualified majority that the
organization hasn’t yet used in its 25-year history.