The UN General Assembly elected on Tuesday Libya, Burkina Faso,
Vietnam, Costa Rica and Croatia to serve as non-permanent members
of the Security Council for two-year terms starting next January
1.
Announcing the results of the first round in the African and
Asian category, where three seats were available, General Assembly
President Srgjan Kerim said Burkina Faso had received 185 votes out
of a possible 190, while Vietnam picked up 183 and Libya received
178.
The three countries, which replace Congo, Ghana and Qatar when
their terms expire at the end of this year, were the only declared
candidates for the region.
However, two other non-permanent seats, awarded to one Eastern
European country and one member of the Latin American and Caribbean
States grouping, remained in contention after no nations were able
to obtain the necessary two-thirds majority during the first round
of voting Tuesday morning.
In the Eastern European category, where 124 votes were needed
for victory, Croatia received 95 and the Czech Republic picked up
91 in the first round, and in the second round the vote was 106 for
Croatia and 81 for the Czech Republic.
In the Latin American and Caribbean grouping, where 126 votes
were needed to win, Costa Rica obtained 116 and the Dominican
Republic received 72 in the first round, and in the second round
the vote was 119 for Costa Rica and 70 for the Dominican
Republic.
Soon after the result for the second round came out, both the
Dominican Republic and the Czech Republic abandoned the fight,
clearing the way for Croatia and Costa Rica to replace Slovakia and
Peru when their terms expire at the end of this year.
Kerim praised "the spirit of good will and mutual trust" among
member states, singling out the Czech Republic and the Dominican
Republic.
The members were elected according to an agreed geographic
allocation, which awards three seats to African and Asian
countries, one to Eastern European States, and one to the Latin
American and Caribbean region during this year's round of
elections.
Council elections are held by secret ballot in the General
Assembly, and a winning candidate requires a two-thirds majority of
ballots of members present and voting. Formal balloting takes place
even in those regions where there is only one candidate per
available seat.
The Council's five other non-permanent members, whose terms end
on December 31, 2008, are Belgium, Indonesia, Italy, Panama and
South Africa. The five permanent members are China, France, Russia,
Britain and United States.
Last year's election saw the third-longest battle in the UN
history for a seat on the council. It ended with victory for Panama
on the 48th ballot after US-backed Guatemala and Venezuela led by
anti-American President Hugo Chavez withdrew to end the deadlock
for a Latin American seat.
(Xinhua News Agency October 17, 2007)