UN Security Council reform looks doomed (China Daily) Updated: 2005-07-16 07:20
The G4 tabled a resolution on Monday, but after two days of debate they found
more opposition than they anticipated. The G4 foreign ministers are scheduled to
meet on Sunday to decide whether to press ahead.
The Security Council is dominated by five members with permanent seats and a
veto: the US, Britain, France, Russia and China, the World War II victors in
1945. The other 10 are rotated on a two-year basis.
The G4 proposes six permanent seats without veto power and four non-permanent
seats. But, according to the security council source, the G4 is being opposed by
Argentina and Chile, which want to block Brazil; Italy and, to a lesser extent,
Spain, which are reluctant to endorse Germany; and Pakistan, which is intent on
stopping India. The G4 is also being opposed at present by all 53 states from
Africa - itself almost enough to prevent the necessary majority.
George Bush, meanwhile, has not forgiven the German chancellor, Gerhard
Schroder, for his opposition to the Iraq War. Shirin Tahir-Kheli, a US envoy
responsible for UN reform, told the general assembly that the US would vote
against the resolution. Tahir-Kheli acknowledged that 2005 was not 1945, but
said "security council reform alone will not address the most pressing problems
of the organisation."
But Emyr Jones Parry, the British ambassador to UN, while making it clear the
British Government would not give up its place or its veto, told the general
assembly Britain would vote for the G4 resolution.
The African countries on Thursday tabled a resolution of
their own proposing a 26-member security council in which Africa would have four
places instead of the three proposed by the G4. Gunter Pleuger, Germany's UN
ambassador, still insisted: "We feel that the votes are there." But the main
hope left for the G4 foreign ministers is to try to reach a compromise with the
African countries.
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