Current positions • Former Director-General of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) • Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Bulgaria to France. • Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Bulgaria to the Principality of Monaco. • Permanent Delegate of the Republic of Bulgaria to UNESCO. • Representative of the Bulgarian Government to the executive board of UNESCO (since the election of Bulgaria in October 2007). • Personal Representative of the President of the Republic of Bulgaria to
Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF). • Deputy Chairperson, Group of Francophone Countries at UNESCO. • Chairperson of the Second Extraordinary Session of the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (February 2008, Sofia). • Member of the Literary group
Prix des Ambassadeur. • In November 2021, Bokova was elected as a Fellow of the
World Academy of Art and Science, an international organization consisting of scientists, scholars, and artists that addresses global challenges.
Parliamentary experience • Deputy Chairperson of the Foreign Policy, Defense and Security Committee. • Member of the European Integration Committee. • Deputy Chairperson of the Joint Parliamentary Committee Bulgaria – European Union.
Civil society experience • Founder and Chairperson of the
European Policy Forum (since its inception in Sofia in 1997), a non-profit, non-governmental organization. • Patron of the
Asian University for Women (AUW) in Chittagong, Bangladesh. The university, which is the product of east–west foundational partnerships (Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Open Society Foundation, IKEA Foundation, etc.) and regional cooperation, serves extraordinarily talented women from 15 countries across Asia and the Middle East.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs • 2005–2009: Ambassador of Bulgaria to France and Monaco • 2005–2009: Ambassador of Bulgaria to UNESCO She took over the position from
Koïchiro Matsuura of Japan. On 15 October 2009, the 35th session of the General Conference elected Irina Bokova of Bulgaria as the tenth Director-General of UNESCO. The investiture took place in a ceremony in Room I in the afternoon of Friday 23 October 2009. On 4 October 2013, the executive board of UNESCO nominated her for second term as Director-General. She was re-elected by the UNESCO General Conference on 12 November 2013. In 2009, while most of the Bulgarian media was supportive of Ms. Bokova's future role at the helm of UNESCO, some raised questions about her past as a daughter of a member of the totalitarian communist elite. Bulgarian-born German writer
Iliya Troyanov criticised Bokova's election as Director-General of UNESCO in the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, calling it "a scandal", in light of Bokova's father's communist past. On the other hand,
The New York Times not only published an article, explaining who Mrs. Bokova is, but also officially supported her nomination on the grounds that "[s]he played an active role in Bulgaria's political transformation from Soviet satellite to European Union member. That should be a strong asset in leading an organization badly buffeted in the past by ideological storms." On 16 January 2014, Irina Bokova yielded to pressure from the Arab League and postponed for five months an exhibit entitled
The People, the Book, the Land – 3,500 years of ties between the Jewish people and the Land of Israel, following protest from the Arab states in UNESCO, arguing it would harm the peace process. Invitations had already gone out and the exhibit was scheduled to run from 21 January through 30 January at UNESCO's Paris headquarters with fully prepared exhibition material already in place. In a letter to Bokova, Abdulla al Neaimi, an official from the United Arab Emirates, expressed "deep worry and great disapproval" over the program showing the age old connection between Israel and the Jewish people. The US State Department said it was outraged at the move, "UNESCO's decision is wrong and should be reversed." Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs said "is no appropriate rationale to delay the exhibition and deeply disappointed by the decision made to postpone it". The Wiesenthal Center called the move an "Absolute outrage, the Arabs don't want the world to know that the Jews have a 3,500-year relationship to the Land of Israel". The exhibition was opened on 11 June 2014 in Paris, in a ceremony with participation by Mrs. Bokova and the Dean of the
Simon Wiesenthal Center, Rabbi
Marvin Hier. The exhibit was co-sponsored by Israel, Canada, and Montenegro, and was called "a breakthrough" by its author, professor
Robert Wistrich. On 18 November 2015 Irina Bokova was given the Special Award of the Simon Wiesenthal Center at a ceremony in Washington, D.C., for the inauguration of the exhibition
People, Book, Land: The 3,500 year Relationship of the Jewish People with the Holy Land in the U.S. capital. Bokova inaugurated the exhibition in the presence of
Edward Royce, Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
Eliot Engel, Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Israel's Ambassador to the United States
Ron Dermer and Rabbi
Marvin Hier. On 28 March 2015, she launched
Unite4Heritage, a campaign aiming to create a global movement "to protect and safeguard heritage in areas where it is threatened by extremists". The campaign was triggered by the programmatic
destruction of cultural heritage conducted in Iraq and Syria by the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) since 2014, in particular after the circulation of videos of looting at
Mosul Museum, destruction in the city of
Nimrud and the UNESCO World Heritage site of
Hatra. As Director-General of UNESCO, Bokova led efforts to block the trade in Syrian and Iraqi cultural artifacts to fund ISIS and other radical Islamist groups. These efforts led to the adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2199 on 12 February 2015. This resolution officially recognized the link between illicit traffic and security, outlawed all trade in cultural goods from Iraq and Syria and requested that UNESCO coordinate efforts in this area with
Interpol. In response to the threat to Iraq's antiquities from increased violence and instability, Bokova implemented an emergency plan to safeguard artifacts of Iraq's cultural heritage. On 19 October 2015, German DW reported that Japan threatens to halt funding for UNESCO over the organization's decision to include documents relating to the 1937 Nanjing Massacre in the latest listing for its "Memory of the World" program. While the decision is not of the Director-General, a Japanese professor claimed that Mrs. Bokova might have interest in courting China. In October 2016, after opposing an Arab-backed resolution in UNESCO denying
Temple Mount's connection to Judaism, Bokova received death threats, prompting her protection to be reinforced.
Post-UNESCO work In 2018 it was announced that Irina Bokova will be teaching at the
Kyung Hee University in Korea. Kyung Hee University also awarded Bokova an honorary doctorate in Peace Studies, and she assumed the Miwon Professorship and the office of the honorary rector of the Humanitas College. In 2020 she was selected as an International Honorary Member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in
Class V — Public Affairs, Business, and Administration, section
Scientific, Cultural, and Nonprofit Leadership. ==United Nations Secretary-General Candidacy==