Win for US over Russia in bid to lead UN telecoms agency
- Doreen Bogdan-Martin elected to head the UN’s telecommunications agency, which sets standards for new technologies
- The American replaces China’s Zhao Houlin, becoming the first woman to lead the agency in its 157-year history

Doreen Bogdan-Martin was elected on Thursday as the first woman to lead the UN’s telecoms agency in its 157-year history, with the US contender beating a Russian rival to the post.
Bogdan-Martin will become the next secretary general of the International Telecommunication Union, which plays an important global role in setting the technical standards underlying mobile phones, television and the internet.
She claimed a landslide 139-25 victory over Russia’s former deputy telecoms minister Rashid Ismailov in an election among the ITU’s member states at a conference in Bucharest.
“Today, we made history. After 157 years, we shattered the glass ceiling,” she said.
Bogdan-Martin has worked her way up through the ITU. She joined its development bureau – one of the ITU’s three main divisions – in 1993 and became its director in 2019, pushing digital transformation.
Contests for the top UN jobs are typically about the balance of power between regional blocs.