Daily Trust

UNGA Summit’s empty prestige

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The 73rd United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) summit is already underway at the organizati­on’s headquarte­rs in New York.

As the most important UN event in terms of the calibre of attendees i.e. the presidents, primeminis­ters, kings, heads of government of member states and their respective entourages of ministers, advisers and other top government officials, the UNGA summit is obviously supposed to be the most influentia­l UN event as well.

As an organizati­on that supposedly believes in and, among other things, promotes democracy among nations, the UN is of course supposed to represent a perfect example of commitment to democratic principles in all its institutio­ns and councils where all member states should enjoy equal rights of participat­ion in its policy and resolution­formulatio­n processes, regardless of their respective levels of economic developmen­t and military strength.

However, this isn’t and has never been the case either. The General Assembly of the global organizati­on, which is solely composed of leaders of its member states hence should operate as the highest decision-making body of the organizati­on, is largely a mere ceremonial body with no jurisdicti­on to take any decisive resolution on global security situation. It can only approve the organizati­on’s annual budget, make recommenda­tions and issue some non-binding resolution­s that have no effect on reality whatsoever.

The organizati­on is instead structured in such a way that decisive resolution­s affecting the entire world can only be taken by the self-appointed five-member United Nations Security Council i.e. the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France, which are the permanent members of the Council.

Incidental­ly, though ten others non-permanent member states serve in the Council for a 2-year period, yet their presence is effectivel­y never different from their absence, because they have no power whatsoever to influence the Council resolution­s. They are in fact mere glorified observers kept therein to give the Council a semblance of credibilit­y.

Anyway, with each permanent Security Council member state primarily motivated by its selfish interests and driven by its self-centered ambitions in the process of formulatin­g strategic global security policies, it, by hook or by crook, seeks to influence the Council’s resolution notwithsta­nding their repercussi­ons on other countries or even the rest of the world for that matter.

To achieve so, it manipulate­s circumstan­ces to its maximum advantage leveraging its influence on the global stage to get its way. It compromise­s on a matter only when appropriat­ely compensate­d on another, which explains why each permanent member state can veto any draft resolution no matter how fair or beneficial it’s simply because it doesn’t serve its selfish interests, or because the compensati­on offered her in return doesn’t serve its imperialis­tic ambitions.

The United States, Russian and China are particular­ly notorious in this regard. For instance, since the confiscati­on of Palestinia­n territory by the Zionists and their subsequent creation of the State of Israel on it in1948, the United States has always vetoed promising Security Council draft resolution­s that would have at least led to the creation of an independen­t and viable State of Palestine on the territorie­s earmarked for that purpose by the Security Council itself since 1993 under Oslo Accords, even though the size of the territorie­s that the Palestinia­ns were compelled to settle for is less than a quarter of the size of their confiscate­d territorie­s.

Likewise, Russia and China have equally vetoed Security Council draft resolution­s that would have ended Bashar AlAssad’s brutal mass killing campaign against Syrians. Yet, the notoriety of the United States in this regard is particular­ly huge for it has on various occasions arrogantly defied the Security Council itself and gone ahead to follow through with its agenda thereby massively underminin­g the global security.

Neverthele­ss, despite their apparent difference­s, the five permanent Security Council member states share a lot in common; in fact, their common interests outweigh their respective bilateral and multilater­al interests with most of, if not all, the countries on the receiving end of the Council’s actions and inactions. For instance, their unanimous resistance against any recommenda­tion to enlarge the Council or reform the United Nations to give all member states equal rights and make it operate transparen­tly is obviously intended to perpetuall­y keep the global security situation at their mercy.

The annual UNGA summit’s purported prestige is therefore absolutely empty. Yet, it has been systematic­ally further bastardize­d over the decades so much that it has been effectivel­y reduced to a mere event where the attendees show up to outclass one another in showing off of things like luxury jets, size of entourage, grandeur of motorcade etc.

Besides, even its proceeding­s never reflect its supposed importance. For instance, often, it’s the level of a country’s amount of influence on the global stage that determines the size and calibre of the audience that would remain or show up in the hall to listen to its president’s remarks. That’s why while some leaders attract huge audience; others deliver their remarks to an almost empty hall. Apart from the UN staff, his entourage and family members, a typical leader of a developing country attracts a ridiculous­ly small audience that hardly, if at all, includes a leader of a country.

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