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Veto dropped in draft for new UN Council members

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  • Veto dropped in draft for new UN Council members

    Veto dropped in draft for new UN Council members

    By Evelyn Leopold

    UNITED NATIONS, June 8 (Reuters) - Germany, Japan, Brazil and India on
    Wednesday dropped the right to a veto for new permanent U.N. Security
    Council members in their revised draft resolution to expand the
    15-member prestigious body.

    The four nations, contenders for permanent council seats, want the
    U.N. General Assembly to adopt a framework resolution as early as
    this month that would add 10 new members to the council, six permanent
    members and four nonpermanent ones.

    The council currently has five permanent members, which would keep
    their veto power, and 10 nonpermanent members rotating for two-year
    terms.

    "On the veto, it has become clear that the question of its extension
    to the new permanent members is best dealt with by the general
    membership" in a review 15 years after the proposed changes come into
    force, said a covering letter to the new draft resolution by the four
    nations who want permanent seats in a new expanded Security Council.

    Consideration of the veto is now postponed until a review in 15 years.
    France, one of the current five Security Council permanent members, on
    Wednesday announced it would co-sponsor the resolution.

    NEW MOMENTUM

    The new draft resolution was circulated to 191 General Assembly
    members, who must vote by a two-thirds majority to expand the council
    after 12 years of debate. The effort was given new momentum this year
    by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan as part of his overall reform of
    the world body.

    Annan argued that the Security Council, which rules on war and peace,
    sanctions and peacekeeping operations, still reflects the balance of
    power at the end of World War Two.

    The second step, which needs another resolution and also a two-thirds
    majority in the Assembly, is to fill in the names of the contenders
    for permanent seats, which will include two nations from Africa.

    And the third step involves a change in the U.N. Charter, which must
    be approved by two-thirds of the legislatures around the world,
    including the current five veto-wielding Security Council powers --
    the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China. Should
    two-thirds of the world's nations approve the changes, a veto by the
    five would prove embarrassing.

    Japan, diplomats said, was considering delaying a vote on the
    framework resolution from June to July, to make sure enough countries
    were supporting it. But German envoys said Berlin opposed this.

    Diplomats speculate the four contenders have about 100 votes and
    needed another 30 or so for the initial resolution. Should a second
    vote take place on who should fill the seats, the envoys said Germany
    faces the least opposition while Muslim nations are expected to
    organize against India.

    FIVE POWERS ARE SPLIT

    Among the current five council powers, France and Britain support the
    candidacies of Germany, Japan, India and Brazil as new permanent
    members. China opposes any seat for Japan and Russia's position is
    unclear.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has been organizing
    teleconferences with her counterparts among the five, has said
    Washington supports Japan. But adding only Japan in the council would
    be defeated easily in the General Assembly, which wants seats for
    developing nations.

    "We have no position. We support Japan but it needs to be handled
    judiciously," Anne Patterson, the acting U.S. ambassador, told Reuters
    on Tuesday.

    A second plan is favored by Italy, Algeria, Mexico, Canada, Pakistan,
    South Korea, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Kenya, Mexico, Spain,
    Turkey and others.

    This group has not put down a resolution and also calls for expanding
    the council from 15 to 25 members. This proposal has no permanent
    seats but longer terms for some nonpermanent members.

    06/08/05 18:07 ET
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