Gujral urges NRIs to lobby for a permanent seat in the Security Council
Prime Minister I K Gujral has urged
non-resident Indians to lobby for India's candidature
for a permanent seat in the UN Security Council. The Security Council is
the policy-making body of the 185-member United Nations.
Speaking at a reception hosted in his honour by the
International Punjabi Society in New York, he said the United
States was a country of lobbyists and India's success would depend,
to a good measure, on the lobbying efforts on its behalf.
The prime minister, who arrived here on Saturday night, to attend the
UN General Assembly session, is expected to discuss the
subject with leaders of other countries during his stay.
India has already staked its claim for a permanent seat
on the basis of its population, size of the economy and contribution
to the UN system in the past five decades.
Brazil and Nigeria are the other
two aspirants for a permanent seat.
Though India has staked its claim, it is fully aware of the
impediments. The existing five permanent members --
USA, Russia, China, Britain and France -- and their supporters
are not very enthusiastic about changing the status quo and losing
their primacy in the world body.
Indications are that UN members would informally discuss
the package assembled by outgoing General Assembly
president Razali Ismail of Malaysia, envisaging an addition of nine
members -- five permanent and four non-permanent members to the
15-member council.
The package seeks to accommodate Japan and Germany in the new
permanent berths on the basis of their economic strength, while
the remaining three could be shared by Asia, Africa and Latin America.
The proposal has the broad support of the United States, but
countries like India insist on evolving a criterion for deciding
the claims, instead of merely going by geographical
considerations.
India would like the reform process to make the UN more
representative and equitable. Also to strengthen the ability of the
organisation to play its developmental role, and become
better equipped to respond to the needs of the developing countries.
The current session of the General Assembly, which began last
week, will discuss UN reforms, expansion of the 15-member Security Council
and related issues as part of its agenda.
In his speech to the NRIs, the prime minister also urged them to participate in the
nation-building process. He referred to the role of the non-
resident Chinese in the development of their mother country. He said that as much
as 80 per cent of foreign investment in China was by the Chinese
living abroad.
He said Indians could make their contribution by helping in the
development of the regions they came from, and also by establishing chairs
in the US universities on Indian studies.
Gujral said India had succeeded in maintaining its integrity in the
fifty years of its Independence, and would now build upon it by
attending to the needs of the sections which had not
benefited from the process of development.
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