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Marginal UNSC reform inadequate; adding permanent members essential: India

India has said that a “marginal reform” of the Security Council was inadequate to make it fit to face the contemporary challenges, and a meaningful reform requires adding permanent members.

Sentinel Digital Desk

UNITED NATIONS: India has said that a “marginal reform” of the Security Council was inadequate to make it fit to face the contemporary challenges, and a meaningful reform requires adding permanent members.

 “The marginal reform in the 1960s that expanded only the non-permanent category has not changed the fundamental mode of functioning of the Security Council in any impactful manner”, India’s Permanent Representative P Harish told the General Assembly on Friday.

 “Expansion of both permanent and non-permanent categories is central to implementing real and meaningful reform”, he said during the discussion of the Security Council Annual Report to the General Assembly.

The current structure of the Council reflects the realities of 1945, and it has hobbled its effective functioning, he said.

 “We all recognise the importance of reform of the Security Council to make it fit-for-purpose to handle contemporary and future challenges we face”, he said.

The 1965 reform, which expanded the number of non-permanent members of the Council from 11 to 15, but not the permanent members, left the 1945 power structure of the UN’s highest decision-making body unchanged.

 “Expansion of both permanent and non-permanent categories is central to implementing real and meaningful reform”, he said.  In 2026, the Council retains the structure devised in 1945 by the five main victors of World War II, who made themselves permanent members with veto powers. (IANS)

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