UN General Assembly Elects 22 New Members
New York, Oct 26 2009 7:10PM
The General Assembly today elected 22 countries to serve on the Economic and Social Council (<"">http://www.un.org/ecosoc/">ECOSOC), one of the principal organs of the United Nations and the body responsible for coordinating the economic, social and related work of various UN specialized agencies, regional commissions and functional commissions.
During a
secret ballot this morning at UN Headquarters in New York,
Member States elected 18 countries to serve three-year terms
starting on 1 January next year and four nations to replace
New Zealand, Sweden, Greece and Portugal, which asked to
relinquish their seats before the end of their current
terms.
The four countries proposed as replacements
were Australia, Finland, Malta and Turkey, and they were
duly elected today after obtaining the necessary two-thirds
majority of countries present and voting.
Australia
and Finland will serve on ECOSOC from the start of next year
until the end of 2010, while Malta and Turkey will serve
through the end of 2011.
ECOSOC’s 54-strong
membership is chosen according to a formula to ensure
geographical distribution, and the remaining 18 countries
elected today were allocated thus: five seats for African
States, four to Asian States, two for the Eastern European
category, three for Latin America and the Caribbean, and
four seats for the category of Western European and other
States.
In each of the five geographical categories,
the number of endorsed candidates did not exceed the number
of available seats.
Ghana, Comoros, Zambia, Rwanda and
Egypt were chosen for the African category, while
Bangladesh, Mongolia, the Philippines and Iraq were selected
in Asia. Ukraine and Slovakia won the two seats allocated to
Eastern Europe.
In Latin America and the Caribbean,
Chile, the Bahamas and Argentina were each elected, while in
the Western European and other States grouping, the
countries selected were Italy, Belgium, Canada and the
United States.
ECOSOC’s membership includes 16 other
countries whose
terms expire at the end of next year: Brazil, Cameroon,
China, the Republic of Congo, Malaysia, Moldova, Mozambique,
Niger, Norway, Pakistan, Poland, the Republic of Korea
(ROK), Russia, Saint Lucia, the United Kingdom and
Uruguay.
Another 16 countries will end their terms on
31 December 2011: Côte d’Ivoire, Estonia, France,
Germany, Guatemala, Guinea-Bissau, India, Japan,
Liechtenstein, Mauritius, Morocco, Namibia, Peru, Saint
Kitts and Nevis, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
For
more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news
ENDS