Brazil and G4 Try New Push for UN Security Council Expansion

Brazil, Germany, Japan and India have submitted a resolution to the U.N. General Assembly calling for 10 new seats on the Security Council. A vote on the measure could come as early as next week.

The so-called Group of Four countries seeking permanent Security Council seats formally presented their enlargement proposal Wednesday. They are asking for an open General Assembly debate, beginning as early as next Monday.


The G4 plan calls for creating 10 new Council seats, raising the total membership from 15 to 25.


Six of the new seats would be permanent, but the new permanent members would not have veto power for at least 15 years.


The G4 countries – Brazil, Germany, Japan and India – are jointly lobbying for four of those new permanent seats. Two others would go to as yet unselected African countries.


G4 ambassadors are hoping for three days of debate on their enlargement proposal in the General Assembly, with a vote by the end of next week. Adoption would require approval of two-thirds of the U.N. membership, or 128 countries.


Chances for approval were thrown into doubt this week when African Union heads of state meeting in Libya suggested the G4 proposal would give Africa too little representation on the Council. Africa’s more than 50 votes are critical to adoption of any General Assembly measure.


Despite the A.U. move, Germany’s U.N. Ambassador Gunter Pleuger told VOA he is confident the G4 measure can win the necessary votes.


He called the G4 proposal “the only alternative on the table”, and said he thinks African leaders will realize that backing the G4 is the only way they can get what they want.


“We have presented and negotiated for one-half year also with the Africans a resolution which we believe caters to the interests of everybody, of all regions, and all regions are profiting from this resolution and we are convinced that a vast majority of member states recognize that and will vote for the resolution,”  Mr. Pleuger says.


There is wide support among the general U.N. membership for the idea of updating the Security Council to reflect 21st century reality. But a diplomat from a G4 country admitted Wednesday that the road to expansion is a difficult one.


Several of the five current veto-wielding permanent members and many other countries oppose the G4 plan. The United States says it would support only “two or so” new permanent members, one of them Japan.


But China strongly opposes Japan’s candidacy, and has spoken out against any move to rush the expansion process. Russia has also been cool to the idea of enlargement.


Even if 128 votes can be found to approve the principle of expansion, a second vote will be needed to choose which countries will be given permanent Council seats.


Once those issues are settled, the third and toughest hurdle will be amending the U.N. Charter. That would require ratification of the legislatures of two-thirds of the General Assembly countries, including all five permanent Security Council members.


VOA

Tags:

You May Also Like

Foreign Capital Will Soon Pay for Grinding a Quarter of Brazil’s Sugarcane

In three to five years foreigners will be grinding 25% of the Brazilian sugarcane. ...

100 Birds Die in Brazil. Country on Alert for Bird Flu.

100 birds died of unknown reasons in a farm in the city of Volta ...

The Case for Federal Intervention in Brasília. Would It Make Any Difference?

On April 21, Brazilian capital Brasília will celebrate its 50th anniversary. A question on ...

War Keeps on Bringing Arabs to Brazil

At the end of the 19th Century, Brazil received a group of Arab immigrants ...

Obama: The Same Who Want US Out of LatAm Now Say We Don’t Interfere Enough

American President Barack Obama joined Friday a controversy boiling in South America by denying ...

Japan’s Sumitomo Buys Stake in Brazil’s Second Largest Steelmaker

Usinas Siderúrgicas de Minas Gerais SA (Usiminas), Brazil’s second-largest steelmaker, agreed to sell a ...

Organic Market Is Mere 2% in Brazil

Resources from Brazil’s Ministry of Agriculture for the organic farming sector will amount to US$ ...

American Tourist Arrested in Brazil Trying to Pull Insurance Scam

American tourist Porfilio Nicholas Anthony, 25, from California, was arrested in Rio early this ...

Brazil Uses IMF Clause to Fix Its Ports

Brazil’s Ministry of Transportation will invest US$ 157.1 million (427 million reais) this year ...

13,000 Family Farmers Enrolled in Brazil’s Biodiesel Program

Brazilian Petrobras Biofuel's Montes Claros Biodiesel Plant should deliver 1.5 million liters of biodiesel ...