Highlighting the shortfalls of an unreformed Security Council, India's Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Asoke Mukerji said that even in the area of its core competence, the 15-nation body is unable to act with credibility essentially due to its unrepresentative nature.
"The Council, which has the primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security, is today a seriously impaired organ. The litany of crises dotting the international landscape, involving the lives of millions of people, which the Council does not have the will or there sources to address, demonstrates this vividly," Mukerji said here yesterday in a General Assembly session on 'Equitable Representation and Increase in Security Council Membership'.
He stressed that without a negotiation text, it is "impossible" for nations to demonstrate their commitment to multilateralism and flexibility to reach an outcome by 2015.
He added that the inter-governmental negotiations should not be perceived to be biased against any individual country or group of countries just because a text is on the table.
"However, if there is no negotiation text on the table, then we would surely have just cause to detect a bias against those of us who are seriously engaged in implementing the explicit mandate given to us by our leaders in the 2005 for early reform of the Security Council," he said.
He urged that once the negotiation text authorised by the President of the General Assembly is placed before member states by Rattray, "we engage in the give and take of actual negotiations to define what early reform of the Council actually means for the vast majority of us in this Assembly.
"It would be a blot on the collective integrity of this organisation if we were to turn our backs to this subject and ignore it completely when our leaders meet next year for the historic 70th Anniversary Summit of the UN," he said.
The US position is similar to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's statement in the General Assembly in September in which he said that the UN, including the Security Council, must be reformed by 2015 to make it more democratic and participative.
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