Grossi beat Romanian diplomat Cornel Feruta to become director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) following the death of the former head Yukiya Amano of Japan in July.
The election of Grossi, Argentinia’s ambassador to the IAEA, comes at a critical time for the Vienna-based agency as Iran is decreasing its commitments under the 2015 landmark deal.US President Donald Trump last year withdrew from the agreement and proceeded to re-introduce sanctions, leaving Iran to press the remaining signatories to hold up economic benefits in return for its nuclear programme cutbacks.
Grossi received 24 votes to Feruta’s 10 from the IAEA’s 35-member Board of Governors in the third official round of voting, reaching the two-thirds majority needed to become the new director general, according to a diplomatic source.
“With Rafael Grossi securing a qualified majority in the board of governors, IAEA has taken a decisive step towards electing its director general,” Xavier Sticker, the French ambassador to the United Nations in Vienna, said on Twitter.
An IAEA general conference is expected to approve the board’s choice.
Feruta had been the organisation’s acting director general since the death of Amano, who had led the agency since 2009.
Grossi, who becomes the first IAEA head from Latin America and is believed to have had the backing of the US, has said he wants to be “an honest broker for all” without a “hidden agenda”.
“My approach with Iran will be very firm but very fair,” the 58-year-old said in a September interview.
Grossi, a seasoned diplomat, became Argentina’s permanent representative to the United Nations in Vienna in 2013.
Prior to that he was at the IAEA from 2010, latterly as the assistant director general for policy and chief of cabinet.
Both Grossi and Feruta had been lobbying strongly for the post with two other contenders — Lassina Zerbo of Burkina Faso and Marta Ziakova of Slovakia — dropping out earlier in the race.
“I think Grossi’s style would be to shake things up a little more,” one diplomat said ahead of this week’s voting, describing the Argentinian as hard-working and engaged. “You can’t fault his work ethic,” the diplomat added. — AFP
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