[The] "recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world."
Preamble- United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
"Today's human rights violations are the causes of tomorrow's conflicts."
Mary Robinson, former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
"The United States...simply doesn't give a damn about the United Nations, international law or critical dissent, which it regards as impotent and irrelevant.
Harold Pinter, 2005 Nobel Laureate for Literature
"The United Nations charter has a provision which was agreed to by the United States, formulated by the United States in fact, after World War II. Its says that from now on, no nation can use armed force without the permission of the U.N. Security Council. They can use force in connection with self-defense, but a country can't use force in anticipation of self-defense. — Regarding Iraq,...the United States went to war, in violation of the charter."
Benjamin Ferencz, Chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials
Anew Secretary-General has presided over the United Nations
for more than a year, but most people ignore this fact. They can be
forgiven, because very little has resulted from the October 13, 2006
election by the 192-member United Nations General Assembly of a shy
South Korean diplomat, Mr. Ban Ki-Moon, as
the U.N. Secretary-General. On January 1, 2007, Mr. Ban Ki-moon took
office as the eighth U. N. Secretary-General, succeeding Mr. Kofi
Annan, for a first term lasting until December 31, 2011. He was a compromise candidate
among seven candidates for the post, and he succeeded in avoiding a
veto from any of the five permanent members of the Security Council. He
was particularly popular with the Bush-Cheney administration because,
in his capacity of Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, he had pushed
his own government to send South Korean troops to Iraq.
We
should recall that one of the first moves by Mr. Ban Ki-moon, soon
after he took office, was to reverse a long-standing United Nations
opposition to the death penalty as a human rights concern. Indeed, he
condoned the death penalty that had been handed down on the deposed Iraqi President Saddam Hussein by the Iraqi High Tribunal, stating, "The issue of capital punishment is for each and every member State to decide."
Mr. Ban Ki-moon has also been criticized for appointing a large number
of his fellow South Korean nationals to key U. N. posts, and for
showing nepotisminappointing his own son-in-law to a key United Nations post in Iraq.
It remains to be seen ifMr.
Ban Ki-moon has the vision, the credibility and the moral authority to
bring forward the reforms that the United Nations urgently needs, if it
is going to avoid the fate of irrelevancy that beset the League of Nations.
So far, the only reforms the new Secretary-General has espoused have
been minor administrative arrangements — and even those were contested
— such as splitting the U. N. peacekeeping operation into one
department handling operations and another handling arms. His proposal
to combine the political affairs and disarmament department was even
rejected outright.
What the United Nations needs is
more than simply shuffling the chairs on the deck of the Titanic. It
needs a fundamental structural reorganization if it is to play the role
it was assigned originally in 1945, that is to say to promote
international cooperation and to maintain international peace and
security. This overall goal can only be achieved if the United Nations
has the legitimacy and the means to prevent wars and to promote human
rights throughout the world.
But, what should the Secretary-General, with the support of member
states, do? — Logically, Mr. Ban Ki-moon should begin by declaring that
the post World War II era is over and that the main obstacle to any
substantial reform of the U. N. should be removed. There is, indeed, a
relic of theSecond World War which is still in place, It is the veto power
that the five winning nations (USA, Russia, China, U.K. and France)
gave themselves after WWII in the functioning of the U. N. Security
Council. Mr. Ban Ki-moon should plead with the five above countries to
show magnanimity and, while retaining their permanent status at the
Security Council as an historical given, convince them that they should
voluntarily forgo the antiquated veto that paralyses any attempt at reforming the United Nations and
at making it a functional organization. Presently, because of the veto
feature, each time one of the five permanent member states is involved
in a crisis or in an international dispute, the Security Council and
the entire United Nations are paralyzed.
The
Secretary-General should tackle the task of improving the U. N.'s
democratic legitimacy and operational efficiency through fundamental
reforms of the Security Council and the General Assembly. Both bodies are antiquated and ill adapted to fulfill their tasks.
First, in a true 21st century spirit, the United Nations Security
Council (UNSC) should better reflect the new demographic, political,
and economic realities that have emerged over the last sixty years.
There is a wide consensus that political and economic powerhouses such
as Japan, India, Brazil and Germany, the G4 nations,
should join the current five permanent members in the Security Council.
These countries are large and stable democracies and economic giants
that should not be left out of the world decision process.
With the current ten countries that join the Council on a regional
basis, in a rotating system, for two-years terms, after having been
elected by the General Assembly, a new 19-member Security Council would
remain small enough to be efficient. As a substitute to the present
veto enjoyed by a few members, a three-quarters majority rule could be
implemented in order to guarantee that the Council's decisions reflect
at all times a worldwide consensus. This would mean that the decisions
and measures, couched in the form of resolutions, and which are arrived
at by the Council, would have to be supported by at least fifteen
members. Since all Members of the United Nations agree to accept and
carry out the decisions of the Security Council, under the U. N.
Charter, such a requirement would seem to be necessary if the U. N.
actions are to carry a wide acceptance.
One big obstacle to enlarging the Security Council comes from the
insistence of some African countries to have a permanent representative
of their continent on the Council. While this is a most legitimate
claim in principle, it is a difficult one to achieve in practice.
First, there is no consensus in Africa about which candidate among
three possible candidates (Egypt, Nigeria or South Africa) should be
elected. And second, even among the later, none seems to meet the
requirements of long-term political stability and economic dynamism and
leadership that one would expect from a permanent member. It would be
most unfortunate if the movement to reform the U. N. were to be
paralyzed because of these facts.
Presently, the presidency of the Security Council rotates among the
members of the Council monthly, in alphabetical order. This leaves the
U. N. Secretary-General somewhat out of the loop, even though he should
be seen as the main spokesperson for the United Nations. An obvious
reform would be to designate the Secretary-General as the ex officio presiding officer of the Council. He would then cease to be regarded as simply a dignified bureaucrat who heads the U. N. Secretariat, rather than being the main spokesperson for the whole United Nations.
While it is true that the U.N. is not a world government,
but rather a forum for the world's 192 sovereign states to debate
issues and determine collective courses of action, this does not mean
that it should not improve its democratic legitimacy, especially as the
world has become more and more globalized and is in need of new
institutions to reflect this new reality.
Presently theGeneral Assembly
is composed of all member nations, and each one of them has an equal
number of representatives designated by their respective governments.
This world parliament, which meets annually from September to December,
has important responsibilities, such as to oversee the budget of the U.
N., appoint the non-permanent members to the Security Council, and
receive reports from other bodies of the U. N. — Such important issues
have to be decided by a two-thirds majority of those members present
and voting. — The General Assembly can also adopt resolutions on other
subjects and this then only requires a simple majority. — Each member
country has one vote. — On the other hand, such resolutions are not
binding on the member states and the Security Council has no obligation
to implement them, with the consequence that in most cases, they remain
pious wishes. We can therefore say that the General Assembly de facto functions as a limited world parliament, but only for governments.
A possible reform designed to raise the democratic profile and prestige
of the General Assembly among people worldwide would be to assign four
representatives to each member country and to encourage countries to
have half of them, or better still, all of them, elected in
country-wide general elections. This could be the most important step
to insure that the United Nations be seen as a truly representative
international body.
On the other hand, since there is no proportional representation in the
U. N., and to insure that its decisions are made and supported by a
large worldwide consensus, and especially to avoid a potentially
disastrous structural North-South split, a three-quarters majority or
even an eighty-percent decision rule could be mandated for important
decisions. Presently, because of the one state, one vote system, it is
theoretically possible for small states comprising just eight percent
of the world population to pass a resolution by a two-thirds vote. No
large country would ever accept to place its fate and interests in the
hands of such a small group of people.
This, of course, is an incomplete list of issues and ideas about how to
proceed to reform the United Nations. You are most welcome to add your
own views to this important subject.
Rodrigue Tremblay is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Montreal and can be reached at rodrigue.tremblay@yahoo.com
It's misleading and annoying to call the General Assembly a "world parliament". The GA is a body composed of diplomats who, of course, are bound to the instructions of their home government. These people are not elected, they are appointed by their government. Actually they are bureaucrats. A parliament is something completely different. It's composed of elected representatives answerable to their constituencies, the voters. A thing which would come nearest to a world parliament would be a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, see www.unpacampaign.org
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January 17, 2008
SMG: Moral Development of the U.N.
Anyone interested in the topic of U.N. reform may also wish to review the following two documents put out by the Baha'i International Community, an NGO with long-standing consultative status with many U.N. agencies.
The Search for Values in an Age of Transition - 2005 http://www.bic-un.bahai.org/05-1002.htm http://www.bic-un.bahai.org/pdf/05-1002.pdf
A Turning Point for All Nations - 1995 http://www.bic-un.bahai.org/95-1001.htm http://www.bic-un.bahai.org/pdf/95-1001.pdf
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January 17, 2008
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