Dominique Strauss-Kahn seen in this file photo
taken on November 11, 2006.The European Union decided on Tuesday to back
former French finance minister Strauss-Kahn to head the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) amid call for the post to be open to non-Europeans.
(Xinhua Photo)
BRUSSELS,
July 10 (Xinhua) -- The European Union decided on Tuesday to back former French
finance minister Dominique Strauss-Kahn to head the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) amid call for the post to be open to non-Europeans.
The EU's Portuguese presidency
said in a message sent to the media that finance ministers from 27 member states
had agreed to support Strauss-Kahn as the IMF's new managing director when they
met here Tuesday.
The current IMF chief Rodrigo
Rato announced last month that he would step down in October for personal
reasons, ending his five-year term two years early.
French Finance Minister
Christine Lagarde confirmed that Strauss-Kahn had been named as the EU's
official candidate for the top job at the IMF, saying his caliber and
international experience won him broad support.
"Dominique Strauss-Kahn has
become the Europeans' candidate for managing director of the IMF," Lagarde told
reporters on the sidelines of the meeting of EU finance ministers, "and that
will allow him to start a campaign and consultation process with all the members
of the IMF."
Under a so-called gentleman's
deal, the IMF is traditionally led by a European, while its sister organization,
the World Bank, is headed by an American.
Both institutions have been
under increasing pressure to undergo internal reforms by giving more say to
other members and developing countries, including the choice of their respective
leaders.
The World Bank last month
unanimously approved former U.S. deputy secretary of state Robert Zoellick as
its new president, despite heated debate over the successor to Paul Wolfowitz,
who was forced to step down for his promotion of his girlfriend.
In response to the nomination of
Strauss-Kahn, British Finance Minister Alistair Darling said, "I think that
Dominique Strauss-Kahn would be a very credible candidate, but the British
government wants to see what other candidates there may be put forward from
other parts of the IMF."
He told British newspaper the
Guardian on Tuesday that the job needed to be open to non-Europeans.
"I don't think Europe can simply
say, 'that position is ours and we are not prepared to discuss it with anyone
else,'" he said in an interview, "the mood out there is for reform."
French President Nicolas Sarkozy
had been lobbying hard for Strauss-Kahn to succeed Rato. At present, the French
are in charge of several international economic institutions, such as the World
Trade Organization, the European Central Bank and European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development.
If Strauss-Kahn gets appointed,
which is certain to be, he will become the fourth Frenchman to head the IMF.
The 58-year-old socialist lost
to Segolene Royal in the Socialists' nomination in this year's presidential
elections, but was regarded as a front-runner to challenge Sarkozy in five
years' time.
Strauss-Kahn, who was finance
minister under the socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin from 1997 to 1999, was
credited with efforts to privatize France Telecom and Air France and his key
role in the introduction of the euro.
He gladly accepted the
nomination. "I want to express warm thanks to the 27 (EU member states) for the
confidence they have shown in me," he said in a statement.