“CONGRATULATIONS TO GUATEMALA, MOROCCO, PAKISTAN & TOGO,” By SUSAN SACIRBEY

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Elections held 21 October 2011 have produced four of five winners to the non-permanent seats on the UN Security Council: Guatemala, Morocco, Pakistan, and Togo. At the time of this writing, a fifth candidate from the Eastern European category has yet to achieve the two-thirds majority votes, and a fourth round of voting is necessary between Azerbaijan, Slovenia, and Hungary. Today’s winning five candidates will be part of the 15-member Security Council and will replace Bosnia & Herzegovina, Brazil, Gabon, Lebanon, & Nigeria whose terms end 31 December 2011. From UN News Centre Sources UN Member States voted in the General Assembly by secret ballot for five non-permanent seats divided by geographical grouping – three from the Africa and Asia-Pacific grouping, one from Eastern Europe, and one from Latin America and the Caribbean. To win election, a country must receive a two-thirds majority of those countries present and voting, regardless of whether or not they are the only candidate in their region. Voting continues until the two-thirds threshold is reached for the required number of seats. To win election, a country must receive a two-thirds majority of those countries present and voting, regardless of whether or not they are the only candidate in their region. Guatemala received 191 votes and was duly elected to the Latin America and Caribbean seat, Assembly President Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser announced after the conclusion of the first round of voting. Morocco received 151 votes and Pakistan received 129 votes, which means they were elected to two of the three seats allocated this year to Africa and the Asia-Pacific. Morocco has served twice previously on the Council – in 1963-64 and again in 1992-93. Pakistan has served on six previous occasions, most recently in 2003-04. Togo (119 votes), Mauritania (98), Kyrgyzstan (55) and Fiji (one) did not receive enough votes in the first round, and during a second, restricted round of voting Togo again received 119 votes while Mauritania obtained 72. But in a third round of voting, Togo obtained 131 votes, above the two-thirds threshold, and was therefore elected. Mauritania received 61 votes. It will be the second time in its history that Togo has served on the Security Council, with the first stint taking place in 1982-83. In the Eastern European category, Azerbaijan received 74 votes, Slovenia picked up 67, and Hungary received 52 in the first round. In two subsequent rounds of restricted balloting, neither Slovenia nor Azerbaijan received enough votes to meet the two-thirds majority threshold. A fourth rote of voting will take place later today. The new members will join Colombia, Germany, India, Portugal and South Africa, whose terms end on 31 December 2012, and the five permanent Council members, which each wield the power of veto – China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. By, Susan Sacirbey Facebook – Become a Fan at “Diplomatically Incorrect”








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DiplomaticallyIncorrect

"Voice of the Global Citizen"- Diplomatically Incorrect (diplomaticallyincorrect.org) provide film and written reports on issues reflecting diplomatic discourse and the global citizen. Ambassador Muhamed Sacirbey (@MuhamedSacirbey) is former Foreign Minister Ambassador of Bosnia & Herzegovina at the United Nations. "Mo" is also signatory of the Rome Conference/Treaty establishing the International…

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