UN General Assembly elected five non-permanent members of Security Council for next two years
Video
The UN General Assembly on Thursday elected Denmark, Greece, Pakistan, Panama and Somalia to serve as non-permanent members on the Security Council for two-year terms beginning on 1 January next year, UN news reports.
They will replace Ecuador, Japan, Malta, Mozambique and Switzerland, whose terms end on 31 December.
In a secret ballot, the elected countries secured the required two-thirds majority of Member States present and voting in the 193-member General Assembly.
The new members will join existing non-permanent members Algeria, Guyana, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone and Slovenia, whose terms started on 1 January. The five permanent Council members, each wielding veto power, are China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Under the UN Charter, the 15-member Security Council holds primary responsibility for maintaining international peace and security, and all Member States are obligated to comply with its decisions.
The 10 non-permanent seats on the Security Council are distributed according to four regional groupings: Africa and Asia; Eastern Europe; Latin America and the Caribbean; and the Western European and other States group.
The candidates this year vied for five seats under three regional groups: two for African and Asia-Pacific (one each); one for Latin America and the Caribbean; and two for Western Europe and other States.
The newly elected members were endorsed by their respective regional groups and ran largely uncontested.


















































Most Popular
Thanks to 129 million drams of donation from Karen Vardanyan, 17 new musical instruments were provided to the Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra