Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
International

Nikki Haley Open To Ideas On Expanding UN Security Council

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Mar, 2017 12:57 PM
    US Permanent Representative Nikki Haley has said she is open to ideas on adding permanent members to the UN Security Council but did not made a categorical endorsement of India's bid for one of the permanent seats.
     
    "I'm open to hearing anyone on what they have to say and looking at it and going further," she said answering a question on Wednesday by Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) President Richard Haas about Security Council reform.
     
    She candidly admitted, "First of all, I'm in learning mode. And as I look at that, I know there is conversations of reform of Security Council."
     
    Haas had mentioned previous administrations raising Council expansion with India being mentioned as a candidate for a permanent seat and asked for President Donald Trump administration's or her views about it.
     
    Former President Barack Obama had endorsed several times India's bid for permanent membership in Council.
     
    In her speech at the CFR, Haley outlined a bold plan to shake up the UN and lead campaign for drastic reforms to both achieve its goals and to make it more efficient.
     
    Washington is the biggest financier of the world body putting up 22 per cent of the regular budget and 28.36 per cent of the peacekeeping outlay. President Donald Trump's administration has proposed a 31 per cent cut to the State Department budget, which could impact its contributions to the UN.
     
     
    Haley said that she would focus in the coming weeks on UN peacekeeping operations, an area with major involvement by India, which has 7,606 troops under the UN banner.
     
    She criticised the peacekeeping operations and said it was shocking that there was no basic evaluation of its missions. Rather than concentrating on finding a political solution through peacekeeping, the UN got bogged down in "parochial questions" about troop-contributors, operation-funders, and the UN establishment.
     
    When the US assumes the presidency of the Council, she said: "We will lay out a comprehensive vision for how peacekeeping missions should be reviewed moving forward. We will go back to first principles and ask hard questions."
     
    Human rights would be the other priority area, she said. "The fact is, peace and security cannot be achieved in isolation from human rights," she added. "Human rights abuses are not the by-product of conflict; they are the cause of conflict, or they are the fuel that feeds the conflict."
     
     
    She noted that the Council had not held sessions devoted exclusively to the subject and said she intended to call one on the connection between human rights and security.
     
    "We intend to challenge member states to start walking the walk and not just talking the talk of human rights," she said. 
     
    "We will see which countries rise to the challenge and which resort to the same old tired excuses. It will be very telling if any country tries to block this debate."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Donald Trump: No Third-Party Run For Me

    Donald Trump: No Third-Party Run For Me
    Donald Trump has explicitly ruled out running as an independent, downplaying the scare scenario for Republicans that he might split the party's support in next year's presidential election.

    Donald Trump: No Third-Party Run For Me

    Chipotle CEO: The Company Will Cover Any Costs To Make Its Restaurants The Safest Anywhere

    Chipotle CEO: The Company Will Cover Any Costs To Make Its Restaurants The Safest Anywhere
    SEATTLE — Chipotle will not raise prices to cover the cost of new food safety procedures put in place after an E. coli outbreak sickened more than 50 people, the company's founder and CEO said Tuesday during a visit to Seattle.

    Chipotle CEO: The Company Will Cover Any Costs To Make Its Restaurants The Safest Anywhere

    Year After Peshawar School Massacre, Pakistan Still Trying To Cope With Rising Terrorism

    Year After Peshawar School Massacre, Pakistan Still Trying To Cope With Rising Terrorism
    As Pakistan marks the first year following the Peshawar attack, surviving school children, teachers and parents have been attempting to make the long journey back to normality.

    Year After Peshawar School Massacre, Pakistan Still Trying To Cope With Rising Terrorism

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities
    PYONGYANG, Korea, Democratic People's Republic Of — North Korea's Supreme Court sentenced a Canadian pastor to life in prison with hard labour on Wednesday for what it called crimes against the state.

    North Korean Court Sentences Canadian Pastor To Life For Anti-State Activities

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points
    For the first time in nearly a decade, America's central bank, the US Federal Reserve raised its key interest rate on Wednesday from a range of 0 percent to 0.25 percent to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent.

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says
    Leading a country comes with extraordinary privileges but also, apparently, a price: new research suggests that heads of state age faster than normal and that the stress of the job may shave almost three years off their life expectancy.

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says