The U.N. General Assembly held elections on Wednesday, June 17, and two hotly contested seats on the U.N. Security Council were at stake.
Five new council members are elected every year and this year Canada, Ireland, and Norway battled for two Western seats and Kenya and Djibouti competed for one African seat. India ran unopposed for the Asia-Pacific seat and Mexico ran unopposed for the seat for Latin America and the Caribbean.
With 187 votes in favor and 5 abstentions, Mexico was elected to the Security Council for the period that will go from January 1, 2021 through December 31, 2022.
The U.N. General Assembly held elections on Wednesday, including for two hotly contested seats on the U.N. Security Council.
Five new council members are elected every year and this year Canada, Ireland, and Norway battled for two Western seats and Kenya and Djibouti competed for one African seat. India ran unopposed for the Asia-Pacific seat and Mexico ran unopposed for the seat for Latin America and the Caribbean.
The Security Council is the U.N.’s most powerful body and has five permanent members — the United States, Russia, China, Britain, and France — and 10 members elected by the General Assembly for two-year terms, with seats allocated to regional groups.
Winning a seat on the council is considered a pinnacle of achievement for many countries because it gives them a strong voice on issues of international peace and security ranging from conflicts in Syria, Yemen, and Ukraine to the nuclear threat posed by North Korea and Iran to attacks by extremist groups such as the Islamic State and al-Qaida.
Before the coronavirus pandemic, countries running for Security Council seats often invited ambassadors for lavish visits to their nations, put on dinners and held receptions with entertainment, and sent senior government officials around the globe lobbying for votes. But the virus has curtailed all of that since March.
Normally, ambassadors from the 193 U.N. member states would meet in the horseshoe-shaped assembly chamber at U.N. headquarters overlooking New York’s East River and vote by secret ballot for new Security Council members. But because of the coronavirus, member states adopted a new procedure of voting at the assembly during spaced-out time slots starting at 9 a.m. EDT Wednesday to avoid a large gathering and ensure social distancing.
The General Assembly presidency rotates by region every year and there is only one candidate to lead the assembly’s 75th session starting in September – Volkan Bozkir of Turkey, selected by Western Europe and other states group.
The 18 candidates for seats on the economic council all ran unopposed. They are Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Nigeria and Zimbabwe from Africa; Indonesia, Japan and Solomon Islands from Asia-Pacific States; Bulgaria from Eastern Europe; Argentina, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Mexico from Latin America and the Caribbean; and Austria, France, Germany, Portugal and the United Kingdom from the Western group.
Source: El Universal