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Brazil Pays Off UN Debt After Over 10 Years of Deadbeatness PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ana Paula Marra   
Tuesday, 03 January 2006

Brazil's Ministry of Foreign Relations has announced that Brazil has paid off its UN debt of US$ 135 million. That will bring the country's annual dues up to date,

Brazil's debt was three years in arrears. The money will also pay for peace operations and criminal courts in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda.

According to Itamaraty, the Brazilian Foreign Ministry, with the payment Brazil will not be in arrears with any UN payments for the first time in over ten years.

In the last few years Brazil has been insisting that it be included into the United Nation's Security Council. On September 14, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva addressed the third meeting of the United Nations Security Council Summit in New York, and called for an expansion in the number of members of the organ, including seats for developing countries from all of the world's regions.

Lula affirmed that it is unacceptable for the Security Council to continue to function with a "deficit of transparency and representativeness."

The Brazilian President noted that the current makeup of the Council is the same as it was when the organ was created at the end of the Second World War. Only the five permanent members (China, the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Russia) have voting and veto powers. The other countries are not permitted to veto resolutions presented before the Council.

"We need to adapt the Security Council to the requirements of a world undergoing profound change," Lula said at the occasion. "Good governance and the democratic principles we esteem should serve as inspiration for methods of collective decision," he observed.

The inclusion of countries such as Brazil as permanent members of the United Nations (UN) Security Council is also defended by the Director of the UN Information Center in Brazil (UNIC-Rio), Carlos dos Santos.

According to Santos, when the UN was first created, there were only 45 member States, and today, there are 191. The number of permanent seats in the Security Council, however, has remained the same during all these 60 years.

"The non-inclusion of other countries as permanent members reduces the institution's credibility, especially among developing nations. The UN needs to incorporate current world geopolitical dynamics, and this means the inclusion of countries such as Brazil, India, Germany, and African countries," he said.

ABr

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Comments (7)Add Comment
Sure !
written by Guest, January 03, 2006


It is a re-election year for Lula !

Repayment was not done without reason.
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Quite curious !
written by Guest, January 03, 2006

Strange that Germany and Japan, countries at least 5 times larger economically than Brazil and every of the countries mentioned in the article dont have the same insistance than you.

You are not a superpower economically, politically and military.


SIMPLE

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true
written by Guest, January 03, 2006
on both counts of the first two comments..it is very true...but why not let other countries have a say, IF they are showing that they are growing countries....with some sense..

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...
written by Guest, January 26, 2006
Who defines what some sense is?
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written by Guest, January 26, 2006
i think brazil should take out who-go chavez first to prove they have some cannon balls and then they can apply to become the 53rd state of amerika, and then they will finally have the security council vote they so desperately want, and all the kickbacks they'll ever need!
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written by Guest, January 27, 2006
:sigh
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written by Guest, January 27, 2006
By all means put Brazil on the Security Council. They have earned the privilege with their outstanding contributions to internatioanal.... ah .... um ...

Well, they're an international leader in ... ah ... er ... ah ...

Never mind.

StinKerr
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