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India expresses concern over UNGA draft resolution on ‘veto power use’, calls it a ‘piecemeal initiative’

Other News Materials 27 April 2022 17:00 (UTC +04:00)

India at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Tuesday said a vocal minority of nay-sayers has held the entire process of UN Security Council (UNSC) reform hostage over the last four decades while calling for a more representative, credible and legitimate UNSC through the inclusion of more underrepresented voices.

UNGA was taking an action on the ‘Resolution on standing mandate for GA meeting in case of use of Veto’. Explaining India’s concern on the draft resolution informally called “veto initiative” aims to bring the requirement of a justification in case ‘veto power’ is used in the UNSC, India’s Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN R Ravindra called the resolution a ‘piecemeal initiative’.

The draft was co-sponsored by dozens including the U.S. and the U.K. With it now adopted, any time one of the Security Council’s five veto-wielding permanent members — China, France, Russia, U.S. and U.K. — use that power to block a resolution in the U.N.’s most powerful body it will require a meeting of the General Assembly, where all U.N. members will be able to voice their views on the veto.

It is therefore ironical that the same set of Member States who argue vociferously against ‘piecemeal reform’ in the IGN (Intergovernmental Negotiations framework), are today themselves supporting a piecemeal initiative, which ignores the root cause of the problem,” Ravindra said.

“We, therefore, hope that other piecemeal efforts focusing on aspects of category of membership and working methods of the Council would be treated without any double standards and with a similar yardstick in future,” he added.

Ravindra highlighted the above as the first of India’s five concerns with the resolution.

India also pointed out that “all five permanent members (of the UNSC) have used the veto over the last 75 years to achieve their respective political ends.”

“The veto as a matter of principle should be abolished. However, as a matter of common justice, it should be extended to new permanent members so long as it continues to exist,” the Indian representative said quoting the position of African nations at the IGN.

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