UNSC no longer apt, does not represent all countries: South Africa
Highlighting ongoing wars, conflicts, and the climate crisis, South African President Ramaphosa said the Security Council’s structure fails to consider diverse viewpoints.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has called for UN reform, stating before the General Assembly that the Security Council is "clearly no longer fit" to address contemporary challenges.
"Placing the fate of the world’s security in the hands of a select few when it is the vast majority who bear the brunt of these threats is unjust, unfair and unsustainable," Ramaphosa said on Sunday at the UN’s Summit of the Future in New York.
Highlighting ongoing wars, conflicts, and the climate crisis, he stressed that the Security Council’s structure “does not represent all countries” and fails to consider diverse viewpoints.
Ramaphosa described the Pact for the Future, adopted by the General Assembly, as a chance to "reinvigorate the multilateral system" and fulfil promises to reform global governance, including the Security Council and international financial institutions.
He also urged support for Africa’s developmental agenda, known as Agenda 2063.
He emphasised that the pact "must involve strengthening multilateral action for sustained peace."
"We must pursue the attainment of just and sustainable peace based on international law," said Ramaphosa, whose government took Israel to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for genocide over Tel Aviv’s indiscriminate offensive on the besieged Palestinian enclave of Gaza since October 7 last year.
Through this Summit of the Future, we must therefore forge global consensus on the causes of these challenges.
— Cyril Ramaphosa 🇿🇦 (@CyrilRamaphosa) September 22, 2024
We must agree on actions to confront and overcome the threats we all face.
This Summit of the Future must bridge the development divide.#UNGA79#SummitoftheFuture… pic.twitter.com/hVqlue2ifR