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Sarkozy: Europe proposes concrete UN Security Council reforms

Other News Materials 27 June 2010 04:11 (UTC +04:00)
Europe's most powerful states have proposed concrete reforms to the United Nations Security Council to give developing powers more say, the French president said Saturday at a Group of Eight (G8) summit in Canada, dpa reported.
Sarkozy: Europe proposes concrete UN Security Council reforms

Europe's most powerful states have proposed concrete reforms to the United Nations Security Council to give developing powers more say, the French president said Saturday at a Group of Eight (G8) summit in Canada, dpa reported.

The council has five permanent members with veto powers: Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States. Other major states, such as Germany and India, have been calling for years for that elite group to be expanded.

"France and Britain have proposed an interim reform of the UN Security Council. (German) Chancellor (Angela) Merkel supports this reform," Sarkozy said.

Diplomats from the countries involved would not be drawn on the substance of their proposal.

But the president of the Council of European Union member states, Herman Van Rompuy, said that it was "an important initiative to rebalance, after 50 years, the composition of the UN Security Council."

Developing states argue that the Security Council is unbalanced because it is dominated by developed states and has no permanent place for new powers such as Brazil, India and South Africa.

There was "extensive discussion" of the proposal at a G8 dinner on Friday, Van Rompuy said.

Four of the five veto holders - Britain, France, Russia and the United States - are G8 members. Their leaders are set to hold talks with China's president later Saturday at a meeting of the Group of 20 leading economies in Toronto.

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