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Turkey Loses U.N. Security Council Seat In Huge Upset

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  • Turkey Loses U.N. Security Council Seat In Huge Upset

    TURKEY LOSES U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL SEAT IN HUGE UPSET

    By Benny Avni
    Filed: 10/16/14 at 6:55 PM | Updated: 10/16/14 at 7:58 PM

    U.N. Ebola mission chief Anthony Banbury speaks to members of the
    United Nations Security Council. Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

    In a tremendous upset, Turkey lost a contest in the United Nations
    General Assembly, exposing increasingly contentious frictions with
    some of its neighbors and world powers.

    Trying to become a nonpermanent member of the Security Council, Turkey
    lost out to Spain and New Zealand in a contest for two available
    seats reserved for a voting bloc called the Western European and
    Others Group, which includes the United States.

    In the past few days, according to several diplomatic sources,
    there was an intense campaign, led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia, against
    Turkey's membership in the council. The two countries are angered by
    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's support for the Muslim Brotherhood,
    which both are fighting at home.

    Newsweek Magazine is Back In Print

    On Wednesday night, Turkey's foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, hosted
    a posh party for diplomats at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York,
    where many of the guests predicted an easy victory for Turkey.

    But some diplomats said after the Thursday vote they had detected an
    unmistakable movement away from the Turkish camp to the Spain.

    Syria, as well as its ally Iran and several others, are also peeved
    by Erdogan's frequent calls to unseat Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    Several Western countries are alarmed by recent reports of Turkish
    attacks on Kurds fighting ISIS in Syria. And Turkey's traditional
    opponent, its neighbor Greece, is also said to have lobbied against
    its election to the U.N.'s most prestigious body.

    "It's surprising, because I was told just days ago that Turkey received
    letters of support from 160 countries," said one diplomat after the
    secret ballot ended in Turkey's failure to edge out Spain.

    The diplomat noted, however, that Spain received 154 letters of
    support from the 193 General Assembly members. "This isn't the way
    this should be done," said the diplomat, referring to the habit among
    member states of expressing support publicly while opposing membership
    in secret balloting.

    After several rounds of voting, Turkey ended up receiving the support
    of only 60 General Assembly members, while Spain got 132 votes,
    more than enough to satisfy the necessary threshold of 128 supporters.

    New Zealand got elected in an earlier round. Angola, Malaysia and
    Venezuela ran unopposed in their regional voting blocs.

    The American U.N. ambassador, Samantha Power, homed in on Venezuela
    after the vote, saying in a statement, "Venezuela's conduct at the
    U.N. has run counter to the spirit of the U.N. Charter, and its
    violations of human rights at home are at odds with the Charter's
    letter. The United States will continue to call upon the government
    of Venezuela to respect the fundamental freedoms and universal human
    rights of its people."

    The five newly elected members will replace Australia, Argentina,
    Luxembourg, South Korea and Rwanda on January 1 and will serve on
    the council for two years. Powers's statement promises to create new
    tensions among council members, but perhaps not as tense had Turkey
    become a member.

    http://www.newsweek.com/venezuela-malaysia-angola-new-zealand-win-un-council-seats-277962

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