May 04 , 2016

News

Pak urges inclusion of more non-permanent seats in UNSC

By APP

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan has made a strong case for creating more non-permanent seats in a restructured United Nations Security Council (UNSC), saying such course would address the present regional imbalance in the 15-member body’s composition.

Speaking in the UN General Assembly’s panel on reforming the Security Council, Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi said the “best way” to accommodate the legitimate regional and political aspirations of member states was to enlarge it in the non-permanent category.

“If the council has more elected members, its transparency, working methods and engagement with the wider membership will improve commensurately,” the Pakistani envoy said in her remarks at a meeting of the stalled Inter-governmental Negotiations (IGN) aimed at making the Security Council more representative and effective.

Additional permanent members, the Pakistani envoy cautioned, would have an opposite effect.

Over the years, the so-called Group of Four – India, Brazil, Germany and Japan – has been pushing for the council’s permanent membership, a move vigorously opposed by the Italy, Pakistan-led Uniting for Consensus (UfC) group, which seeks expansion in the non-permanent category. Pakistan also supports an Italy-Columbia proposal that would create a new category of members – not permanent members – with longer duration and a possibility to get reelected.

The Security Council is currently composed of five permanent members – Britain, France, Russia and the United States, and has 10 non-permanent members that are elected in groups of five to two-year terms.

“More permanent and unaccountable members will diminish, not enhance, the council’s effectiveness,” Ambassador Lodhi said. In contrast, she said more elected members were likely to enhance transparency and widen consultations, thus increasing the council’s efficiency and legitimacy.

“The argument that new permanent members will counter the dominance of the existing permanent members is baseless,” she told the panel. Without a system of accountability, she said, virtue could easily degenerate into impiety, adding that UN member states were equal so long as they afford equal opportunity to each other.

“Additional electable seats, on the basis of periodic elections and fixed rotation, will allow equal, fair and increased opportunity to all states to aspire for the council’s membership,” Lodhi said. It would also allow larger regions, such as Asia and Africa, to accommodate cross-regional and political groups, including the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Arab League, Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS).

“We understand and empathise with the aspirations of regional groups who seek adequate representation. A consensus based regional demand is fundamentally different from the demand for individual membership by a few whose national ambitions have in fact divided their regions and thwarted reform for so long,” she maintained. She said the principle of sovereign equality of states demands equal opportunity for all states to seek the council’s membership, noting that it was the bedrock of Pakistan’s past and present ideas on the Security Council reform.

Among the geographical regional groups, she noted the African Group was the only one that unanimously sought stronger representation on behalf of a geographical region so that those representing Africa will be guided by common positions, emanating from the African Union.

 

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

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