Sir Don Mckinnon Recognised For 35 Years of Service
MEDIA RELEASE
Sir Don Mckinnon Recognised For 35 Years of World Class Service.
2013 World Class New Zealand Awards
The Rt Hon Sir Donald McKinnon ONZ GCVO – Supreme Award
Sir Don McKinnon, whose life’s work has involved extending the commercial and moral influence of New Zealand around the world, has been named Supreme Award winner at the 2013 World Class New Zealand Awards.
Sir Don received his award from Prime Minister the Rt Hon John Key at a gala dinner in Auckland tonight.
From modest beginnings as an army conscript, farm manager and real estate salesman, Sir Don went on to have the most distinguished foreign affairs career of any New Zealander on record. He has been Commonwealth Secretary General; New Zealand’s longest serving Foreign Affairs and Trade minister, a Nobel Prize nominee, and latterly, a member of the Order of New Zealand.
With such a superb CV, Sir Don became an obvious choice for judges contemplating a truly outstanding New Zealander to receive the Air New Zealand sponsored Supreme Award in this year’s World Class New Zealand Awards, which are delivered by Kea on behalf of New Zealand Trade and Enterprise.
“It would be hard to think of anyone more deserving of this honour than someone who has proven themselves constantly world class in 35 years of public service,” says John Stace, chair of judges and Kea Global board member.
“Sir Don’s championing of New Zealand – as well as championing Kiwi ethics such as fairness and humanity for all of the world’s people – puts him into a league of his own.”
Entering Parliament as the Member for Albany
in 1978, and going on to service as the National Party’s
chief whip, Sir Don progressed to Deputy Prime Minister and
Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister in 1990, a role in which
he served a record-breaking nine Page 2 of 4
years.
While in Parliament he also held a diverse range of other
portfolios including Veteran and Pacific Island Affairs.
Sir Don oversaw New Zealand’s election to the UN Security Council in 1993 and sent Kiwi peacekeepers to help calm trouble-spots. He also brokered an accord that ended a decade of civil war in Bougainville, Papua New Guinea, in 1997, for which he was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.
In 2000, Sir Don left Parliament to become Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, serving eight years. During his time in the role he had to negotiate a number of sticky political situations confronting the Commonwealth including Robert Mugabe’s controversial rule in Zimbabwe and George Speight’s attempted nationalist coup in Fiji.
He added the Order of New Zealand to his impressive collection of accolades in 2009, accepting the Knight Grand Cross of the Victorian Order from the Queen herself in the same year in recognition of his Commonwealth work.
With nine honorary doctorates to his name, Sir Don continues to lend his vast experience to a range of national and international organisations including the NZ China Council, the Global Panel Foundation, the Aspen Ministerial Forum, the NZ Latin American Business Council, Regional Facilities Auckland and the Waitangi National Trust Board.
Sir Don was honoured as Supreme Winner alongside seven categories winners – including electromagnet pioneer Bill Buckley, sustainable energy entrepreneur Dr Sean Simpson, animal health solutions developer Dr Doug Cleverly, international business achiever Judith Hanratty, global technology guru Geraldine McBride, food empire builder Annabel Langbein and high-flying former Air NZ CEO Rob Fyfe.
Also announced at the gala dinner was the Friend of New Zealand Award, who has made an outstanding contribution to New Zealand. This year’s Friend of New Zealand went to Australian newspaper editor Andrew Holden in recognition of his efforts as editor of The Press in the wake of the deadly 2011 Christchurch earthquake. Surrounded by death and disaster Mr Holden rallied his troops and kept The Press running as a vital source of information for the devastated Christchurch community.
All World Class New Zealand awards were presented with the World Class New Zealand Tall Poppy statuette designed by Sir Richard Taylor, co-founder of Weta Workshop and Supreme Award winner in 2009. The 2013 Awards were judged by a panel of six, comprising John Stace (Chair of judges), Jon Mayson, Professor Sir Peter Gluckman, Dame Judith Mayhew Jonas, Bridget Liddell and Sir Tipene O’Regan.
Nominees for the annual Awards are evaluated against five main criteria, with a focus on promoting New Zealand internationally, building global connections and facilitating the exchange of information, knowledge and skills from, and about, New Zealand.
(Sponsored by Air New Zealand)
(Sponsored by ANZ)
(Sponsored by Ernst & Young)
(Sponsored by Wellington City Council)
(Sponsored by BDO Auckland)
Chair,
Commonwealth Education Trust
(Sponsored by AUT University)
(Sponsored by Douglas
Pharmaceuticals) Buckley Systems
International Ltd.
(Sponsored by Gen-i)
(Sponsored by The Royal Society
of New Zealand) Author.
The full list of winners for the 2013 World
Class New Zealand Awards is: Name
Award category
Position/Company
Sir Don McKinnon
Supreme Award
Former Commonwealth Secretary
General, Deputy Prime Minister, Foreign Affairs and Trade
minister; Nobel Peace Prize nominee.
Andrew Holden
Friend of New Zealand
Editor in Chief of The Age
newspaper, Melbourne
Dr Doug Cleverly
Life Sciences
Managing Director and
Co-Founder of Argenta.
Annabel Langbein
Creative
Founder and principal of
Annabel Langbein Media Ltd; Celebrity Cook, Food writer and
publisher. Judith
Hanratty Investment and
Business Former Company Secretary, BP;
Director, Partner Re Ltd; Geraldine McBride
Information and Communications
Former President, SAP North
America; advisory board member Victoria University biology
school’s applied science centre.
Bill Buckley
Manufacturing, Design and
Innovation Founder and
sole owner, Rob Fyfe
New Thinking
Former Chief Executive
Officer, Air New Zealand.
Dr Sean Simpson
Science, Technology and
Academia Chief
Scientific Officer and co-founder, Lanzatech;
ENDS