Kouchner began his political career as a member of the
French Communist Party (PCF), from which he was expelled in 1966 for attempting to overthrow the leadership. On a visit to
Cuba in 1964, Kouchner spent the night fishing and drinking with
Fidel Castro. In the
protests of May 1968, he ran the medical faculty strike committee at the
Sorbonne.
Co-Founder of Médecins Sans Frontières and Médecins du Monde Kouchner worked as a physician for the
Red Cross in
Biafra in 1968 (during the
Nigerian Civil War). His experience as a physician for the Red Cross led him to co-found
Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in 1971, and then, due to a conflict of opinion with MSF chairman
Claude Malhuret, he established
Doctors of the World ('Médecins du Monde') in 1980. Kouchner worked as a humanitarian volunteer during the Siege of Naba'a refugee camp in Lebanon in East Beirut during the
Lebanese Civil War taking risks that "other foreign aid workers weren't, even worked closely with the
Shia cleric
Imam Musa al-Sadr".
Career in government From 1988, Kouchner began his government career in Socialist governments, though he was not always a member of the
Socialist Party (PS). He became "Secrétaire d'état", a lower position in the Cabinet, for Humanitarian Action in 1988 in the
Michel Rocard cabinet, then
Minister of Health under
Pierre Bérégovoy in 1992, during
Mitterrand's presidency.
Member of the European Parliament, 1994–1997 Kouchner continued his political career in the
European Parliament from 1994 to 1997. During the time, he chaired the
Committee on Development and Cooperation and served on the
Subcommittee on Human Rights. In addition to his committee assignments, he was a member of the Parliament's delegation for relations with the
People's Republic of China. Together with Judge
Andrée Ruffo, Kouchner established the
International Bureau for Children's Rights (IBCR), a
non-governmental organization based in Montreal, in 1994.
Minister of Health, 1997–1999 When
Lionel Jospin became Prime Minister in 1997, Kouchner became
Minister of Health for the second time. He held the office until 1999.
UN Representative in Kosovo, 1999–2001 On 15 July 1999, pursuant to
Security Council Resolution 1244,
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan nominated Kouchner as the second
UN Special Representative and Head of the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (
UNMIK). He lost before the final election round, and (Hong Kong) Chinese candidate
Margaret Chan was later elected. In 2007, the
European Commission appointed Kouchner as its representative on the
International Independent Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP), a group of individuals nominated by international donor countries and the
government of Sri Lanka, vested with a wide mandate to observe all investigations and inquiries conducted by and on behalf of the Commission of Inquiry into alleged
human rights abuses in Sri Lanka.
Minister of Foreign Affairs, 2007–2010 After the election of
Nicolas Sarkozy as
President of France in 2007, Kouchner was appointed
Minister of Foreign Affairs in
Prime Minister François Fillon's government, even though Kouchner supported Sarkozy's Socialist rival
Ségolène Royal during the campaign. He has since been expelled from the Socialist Party for his acceptance of the post. Kouchner was dismissed in the November
2010 Fillon cabinet reshuffle. ==Political positions==