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Brazil Presses Ahead to Reform and Get Permanent Seat at UN PDF Print E-mail
Written by Luciana Vasconcelos   
Tuesday, 19 July 2005

Brazil's Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, says he has felt a "reform impulse" in the air during conversations with other diplomats at the UN with regard to Security Council changes.

Amorim has been busy. He has met with both the outgoing president of the General Assembly, Jean Ping, and the new one, Jean Eliasson. He participated in a meeting of the G4 (Brazil, Germany, India and Japan) with the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan.

Amorim is also aware that reforming an organization with 190 members is not an easy task.

"This is not something simple, but there is a feeling that it is the right thing. It is just right to make the Security Council more balanced in its representativity," he declared.

The G4 proposal for Security Council reform calls for expanding the total number of members from 15 to 25, and the number of permanent members from 5 to 11 (adding representatives from the Americas (1), Europe (1), Asia (2) and Africa (2). The members of the G4 would become permanent members, but without veto power.

The G4 proposal should go to a vote in the General Assembly before the end of July. To be approved it needs two-thirds of the votes (128). In the General Assembly each country has one vote and there are no vetoes.

ABr - www.radiobras.gov.br

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