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UN deadlocks again on Security
Council seat

U.N. Security Council
AFP
UNITED
NATIONS
Petroleumworld.com 10 26 06
The UN deadlocked again Wednesday on choosing between US-backed Guatemala
and fierce US critic Venezuela for a non-permanent seat on the Security
Council as the rivals hinted at compromise.
After a morning of discussions over whether a new pair of countries
could be submitted for the Latin America/Caribbean seat that comes vacant
in January, the United Nations General Assembly resumed voting and failed
to pick a clear winner in several more votes, taking the total failed
polls to near 40.
Guatemala has topped Venezuela in all but one of the votes which began
on October 16, but each time failed to come up with the necessary two-thirds
of the countries voting to win.
A five-day break to allow talks on the impasse before voting resumed
Wednesday appeared fruitless. Members of the UN Latin American and Caribbean
Group, known as GRULAC, had sought to find a compromise country for
the region's rotating Security Council seat, to be vacated by Argentina
on December 31.
In the wake of Wednesday's continued impasse, the foreign ministers
of Venezuela and Guatemala were expected to meet Thursday to review
their positions and possibly negotiate a consensus candidate, UN diplomats
said.
The United States strenuously has fought to block Venezuela's Security
Council aspirations, fearing that President Hugo Chavez's leftist government
would use the seat to routinely oppose US measures and openly attack
Washington.
During an address to the UN General Assembly last month, Chavez called
US President George W. Bush a "devil" and said the podium
still "smelled of sulphur" a day after the US leader had spoken
there.
The Security Council is made up of 15 members, including five veto-wielding
permanent members -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States
-- and 10 non-permanent members, five of which are replaced every year.
The four other member states to assume seats in January were approved
without dispute earlier this month.
In the case of Venezuela and Guatemala, though, with UN rules allowing
for indefinite voting, the battle could last for some time.
A similar standoff between Colombia and US-opposed Cuba in October 1979
dragged on for more than two months and 154 rounds of voting. It ended
in January 1980 with the election of a third candidate, Mexico.
Chavez has admitted that he cannot likely win the fight, though he has
claimed success in standing up the "the imperialists", the
United States.
"At these levels, it is very difficult to achieve the two-thirds.
But what is clear is that we have achieved something which only Cuba
has achieved, in the 1970s," he said.
Tuesday Bolivian President Evo Morales announced that Chavez said he
would give up his quest for the seat and back Bolivia for it.
But Venezuela's UN ambassador, Francisco Arias Cardenas, suggested Wednesday
this was a misunderstanding arising out of exploratory contacts by Venezuela
in seeking a solution to the impasse.
Asked about Bolivia's potential candidacy, a US State Department official
said Washington's position would remain the same as long as GRULAC has
not announced a third candidate.
"Until the GRULAC announces that there is a third candidate, the
United States will continue to support Guatemala," said the official,
who requested anonymity.
AFP
252151 GMT 10 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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