Four nations submit plan to enlarge UN Council

Published: 7 July 2005 y., Thursday

Germany, Japan, Brazil and India submitted a U.N. General Assembly resolution on Wednesday to enlarge the 15-seat Security Council by 10 members in hopes of a vote next week, Japan announced.

The four aspirants for permanent council seats, known as the Group of Four or G-4, want a vote on a framework resolution that would call for six new permanent council seats, without a veto, and four new rotating nonpermanent seats.

The Japanese mission to the United Nations said the draft resolution must be translated into U.N. official languages before it is distributed to the 191 General Assembly members.

A G-4 envoy, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged that this week's Africa Union summit in Sirte, Libya, had confused his strategy because the AU decided to produce its own resolution and "at the same time say they are willing to negotiate."

The four aspirants are expected to negotiate with the African Union at the Group of Eight summit of industrial nations in Gleneagles, Scotland, this week.

But without Africa's 53 votes, the G-4 draft resolution will not reach the 128 or two-thirds vote required among the 191 U.N. General Assembly members.

Šaltinis: swissinfo.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Mali's President Amadou Toumani Touré: “Africa will have its chance”

“Demography, raw materials, and our people will certainly give us one day our luck,” said Amadou Toumani Toure, President of Mali, on Tuesday when he addressed the European Parliament in Strasbourg. more »

Tube strike causes travel chaos

Millions of commuters in London struggle to get to work as a 24 hour strike by workers on the underground rail system cripples much of the network. more »

EU should be communicated better, say MEPs

Better communication by governments, parties, educational institutions and public service broadcasters is vital to overcome the perception of many citizens that “Europe” is too distant and can do little to solve their real problems, say MEPs in a resolution approved on Tuesday. more »

MEPs discuss humanitarian needs after floods in Pakistan

EU humanitarian aid Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva stressed Pakistan's needs for food, clean water, sanitation and shelter in a debate on Tuesday. more »

Flood alert in southeast Australia

Residents of several Victoria towns remain on high alert as flood waters continue to rise. more »

Pakistan flood victims return home

Residents of flood-hit Sindh are heading back to their hometowns, some still a metre deep in water. more »

Quake cleanup in New Zealand

The city of Christchurch is facing challenges days after being hit by a powerful earthquake more »

Japan temps break records and sweats

Japan continues to suffer under a record-breaking heatwave that has led to the deaths of some 500 people, and sent nearly 47,000 to hospital. more »

Indonesian villagers flee volcano

Thousands of Indonesian villagers are living in shelters, after they were forced to flee their homes near erupting Mount Sinabung. more »

EP President Jerzy Buzek meets Polish President Bronisław Komorowski

The destination of the first official visit of newly elected Polish President Bronisław Komorowski was the European Parliament in Brussels, where he received a warm welcome from his host, a man he smilingly described as his “former boss”, current Parliament President Jerzy Buzek. more »