Expansion in both permanent, non-permanent categories of membership in UNSC absolutely essential: India


PTI | United Nations | Updated: 10-03-2023 11:09 IST | Created: 10-03-2023 11:07 IST
Expansion in both permanent, non-permanent categories of membership in UNSC absolutely essential: India
India's Permanent Representative to UN Ruchira Kamboj Image Credit: ANI

India has said the expansion in permanent and non-permanent categories of the UN Security Council is ''absolutely essential” to ensure that voices of developing countries and unrepresented regions find their due place at the world body's top organ.

Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, also said the expansion of both categories is the only way to bring Security Council's decision-making dynamics in line with contemporary geo-political realities.

The remarks by Kamboj came during her address on Thursday to the Informal Meeting of the Plenary on the Intergovernmental Negotiations (IGN).

“We need a Security Council that better reflects the geographical and developmental diversity of the United Nations today. A Security Council where voices of developing countries and unrepresented regions, including Africa, Latin America and the vast majority of Asia and the Pacific, find their due place at the table,” Kamboj said.

She said to achieve this objective, an expansion of the 15-nation Council in both categories of membership is absolutely essential. “This is the only way to bring the Council’s composition and decision-making dynamics in line with contemporary geo-political realities. If countries are truly interested in making the Security Council more accountable and more credible, we call on them to come out openly and support a clear pathway to achieve this reform in a time-bound manner, through the only established process in the UN, which is by engaging in negotiations based on text and not through speaking at each other or past each other as we have done for the last three decades,” she said.

The meeting was convened meeting on two clusters - the size of an enlarged Security Council and working methods of the Council and the relationship between the Security Council and the General Assembly.

In a significant development in the slow-moving reform process, for the time, the intergovernmental negotiations on Security Council reform were webcast. President of the 77th session of the UN General Assembly Csaba Korosi termed this as a ''game-changing approach” and expressed gratitude to IGN Co-Chairs Permanent Representative of Kuwait Ambassador Tareq Albanai and Permanent Representative of Austria Ambassador Axel Marschik.

Terming this development as a “recent evolution within the Inter-Governmental Negotiations”, Kamboj voiced appreciation for the co-chairs for recommending a webcast of the first segment of each of the IGN meetings and establishing a specific website to act as a repository of the recordings of the webcasts as well as of the letters, decisions and other documents related to the IGN process, as well as links to the statements of the member states.

''This is a small welcome step in the right direction. We do hope that this will force multiply positively to the updation of the Elements Paper and the attribution of positions thereof, under each of the five clusters. We very much also hope that webcasting of the proceedings and the establishing of a website, will enable delegations to innovate their remarks and avoid repetition,” she said.

India and other G4 nations of Brazil, Germany and Japan have repeatedly said that the IGN is constrained by a lack of openness and transparency.

Kamboj asserted that on the issue of the size of the Council, there already exists a convergence among the members.

“We all agree that the Security Council’s size should be expanded in order to make it more legitimate and representative.” She said the revised number of total Council seats should be in the ''mid to upper 20s, no less than 26 seats”, which allows for an adequate balance between representativeness, legitimacy and effectiveness. “But this number should be an outcome of text-based negotiations on the key issues of categories of membership and regional representation,” she said.

The Council currently is composed of five permanent members - China, France, Russia, the UK and the US and 10 elected non-permanent members who serve two-year terms. India completed its tenure as a non-permanent member of the Council in December last year.

Kamboj added that the Council would be more transparent, efficient, and effective if its working methods were revised and updated. The methods would need to be adapted to the size and composition of a reformed Council.

“The fundamental problem in the Security Council stems from its lack of representativeness,” she said.

Further, Kamboj said there are items on the agenda of the Security Council on which discussion has not taken place for more than seven decades.

“We also underscore the need for a fair distribution of responsibilities between elected and permanent members. Selection of Chairs of subsidiary bodies and distribution of pen-holderships must be open, transparent, based on exhaustive consultations, and with a more integrated perspective. This is one of the best ways to enhance the decision-making process,” she said.

Noting that the role of the 193-member General Assembly remains essential, as the most universally representative deliberative organ of the United Nations, she stressed that it is therefore important to maintain regular coordination and interaction between the Security Council and the General Assembly as well as the other main organs of the UN, while respecting the specific competencies and mandates of these organs.

Terming the mandate of the Security Council and the General Assembly as unique and distinct, she said both are the principal organs of the United Nations.

“The ‘veto initiative’, despite its noble objective, ended up removing the discretion and decision-making ability of the President of the General Assembly. Let us not forget the fact that we already had mechanisms in place, which enabled the membership of the General Assembly to decide on an “emergency basis” to convene discussions or even act on issues that are stalemated in the Security Council,” she said.

In April last year, the UN General Assembly decided to automatically meet within 10 days, if the veto is used in the Security Council by one of its five permanent members.

Following the adoption of the resolution on the veto initiative, the use of the veto in the Council by a permanent member now triggers a General Assembly meeting, where all UN members can scrutinise and comment on the veto. The decision came in the wake of Russia using its veto in the Council, the day after it invaded Ukraine in February last year.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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