India Pushes for Substantial UN Security Council Reform
India advocates for substantive reforms of the UN Security Council, rejecting superficial changes that could delay key issues like permanent membership expansion. Criticizing stalled progress, India urges meaningful dialogue and warns against using minimal consensus as a cover for inaction. Recognizes the need for representation for legitimacy and effectiveness.
In a fervent appeal at the UN General Assembly, India has called for profound and tangible reforms to the UN Security Council. Ambassador P Harish criticized superficial reform efforts that obscure substantial change, cautioning against delaying necessary expansion and addressing geopolitical imbalances.
India underscores a historical inertia, noting no significant reform since 1965 in expanding permanent security membership. The intergovernmental negotiation process remains a static exercise of statement exchanges rather than constructive dialogue, lacking clear objectives or timelines. Delhi emphasizes the critical need to develop a reformed council model as a precursor to meaningful negotiations.
Highlighting representation as foundational for legitimacy and effectiveness, India points to the adaptive success of frameworks like the G20. Asserting its rightful claim for a permanent Council seat, India champions reform as vital for the UN's credibility, aligning with the global commitment to restructure to reflect contemporary geopolitical realities.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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