India: UN will become obsolete if not reformed.
India’s foreign minister has called for the reform of the UN structure and warned that the organization will become “obsolete” if it is not reformed.
Indian Foreign Minister Subramaniam Jaishankar warned that if the United Nations continues to resist the reform of its structure, it will eventually become an “obsolete” organization, and as a result of this situation, no one will look to find a solution. The United Nations will not go and will look for solutions outside this organization.
According to “Asia News”, in a speech addressed to a group of Indian students at the Institute of Technology and Space Sciences of this country, the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council told the passengers who are sitting on the seats of a bus and refuse to get up. Even with the observation of passengers in need of their seats, they are not compared.
Jaishankar said, in recent years, the pressure on the United Nations to change has increased and it is necessary for this world organization to understand this message.
“There must be pressure,” noted the Indian foreign minister. In the past few years, a large part of the world has felt that this change must be made. There are 54 countries in Africa, but not even one of them is a (permanent) member of the Security Council. Not a single country from Latin America has a seat there. “The most populous country in the world and the fifth largest economy in the world does not have a seat there.”
This senior diplomat of the Indian government warned: “How long are you going to continue this situation?” What happens if you don’t fix it? In that case, people will find solutions outside (from the United Nations). The United Nations must understand this message. “They will become obsolete, and even if they don’t disappear, they will become an inappropriate entity.”
“Narendra Modi”, the Prime Minister of India, at the conclusion of the recent summit of the Group of 20 leaders in New Delhi, the capital city of his country, emphasized that international organizations should be in line with the “current realities” and cited the United Nations Security Council as one of these organizations. .