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Rice spurns Venezuela's bid for UN Security Council seat
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
09 27 06
The UN Security Council needs "responsible states" and not
those who want to air their anti-American views at the expense of solving
crucial problems, United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
said in a clear reference to Venezuela.
"It would mean the end of consensus on the Security Council. Now,
that's a serious matter," Rice told The Wall Street Journal in
an interview whose transcript was released Monday by the State Department.
"This is about whether or not a state is responsible or simply
wishes to have a constant struggle with the United States every day
on every issue, thereby making the Security Council unworkable,"
Rice said when asked about Venezuela's chances of being chosen as a
permanent, non-veto wielding council member.
Germany, Brazil, India and Japan, as part of a so-called Group of Four,
have lobbied for permanent seats as part of the first expansion of the
council since the UN was founded in the aftermath of World War II.
The Security Council has 15 members of which five -- Britain, China,
France, Russia and the United States -- are permanent members with veto
rights. It is to be expanded to six new permanent seats without veto
power and four new non-permanent seats.
New non-permanent members are due to be designated in October.
The United States, which accuses Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez of
seeking to destabilize democracies in Latin America, has backed Guatemala's
rival bid for one of the seats reserved for a Latin American nation.
"This is about the most important body in the world and you want
responsible states on that body," Rice told The Wall Street Journal.
She referred to a speech Chavez last week gave before the UN General
Assembly, in which he described US President George W. Bush as "the
devil," and suggested that the September 11 attacks on the United
States were self-inflicted.
"I will tell you that I think Hugo Chavez did himself no good with
that speech," Rice said. "And whatever press attention it
got, it also got the attention of a lot of people who worry about the
responsibilities of the Security Council."
AFP
26 1000 GMT 09 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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