Derek Plumbly

Sir Derek Plumbly KCMG (born 15 May 1948) is a British diplomat who has served throughout the Arab world. From 2012 to 2015, he served as the UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon.

Early life

Plumbly was born in the New Forest in Hampshire. He attended Brockenhurst Grammar School. He studied politics, philosophy and economics at Magdalen College, Oxford. After graduating, Plumbly signed up for Voluntary Service Overseas and taught for a year and a half in Sukkur in Pakistan's Sindh province.

Plumbly subsequently studied Arabic, first at the Middle East Centre for Arab Studies in Shemlan, Lebanon, where he lived with a local family for a year, and then at the University of Jordan.

Career

Plumbly has served in a variety of postings around the Middle East and elsewhere, including Ambassador to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Ambassador to the Arab Republic of Egypt. In February 2008 he was appointed by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir to head the Assessment and Evaluation Commission, charged with monitoring the implementation of Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement.[1] In 2011, he was appointed as the United Nations Special Coordinator for Lebanon (UNSCOL); he served in this position from 2012 to 2015.

Since 2015, he is Visiting Professor of Middle Eastern Studies at King's College London.

Timeline of career

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gollark: That would possibly expose your IP to it which might be bad.
gollark: How should profile pictures work? Presumably you'd want them globally set, so they'd be fetched from your identity server, but would each server you chat in have to proxy them or something?
gollark: The actual messaging features are in a different spec to their bizarre XML encapsulation formats.
gollark: Indeed. I think we may be slightly reinventing XMPP, but XMPP is beeoid due to it being overly "extensible".

See also

Notes

  1. About the AEC Archived 11 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Assessment and Evaluation Commission web site. Retrieved on 7 July 2009.
  2. "UK Plumbly appointed as head of Sudan's peace monitoring body". Sudan Tribune. 13 February 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2009.

References

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Sir Andrew Green
British Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
2000–2003
Succeeded by
Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles
Preceded by
Sir John Sawers
British Ambassador to Egypt
2003–2007
Succeeded by
Dominic Asquith
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