Saudi Rejects Seat on 'Double-Standards' Security Council
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةSaudi Arabia rejected membership of the U.N. Security Council on Friday, a day after it was elected to the body, accusing it of "double-standards" in resolving world conflicts.
"Work mechanisms and double-standards on the Security Council prevent it from carrying out its duties and assuming its responsibilities in keeping world peace," the foreign ministry said.
"Therefore Saudi Arabia... has no other option but to turn down Security Council membership until it is reformed and given the means to accomplish its duties and assume its responsibilities in preserving the world's peace and security," a statement said.
For the first time ever, oil-rich, conservative Saudi Arabia won a seat Thursday on the 15-member council, which has a key role in dealing with world conflicts.
Saudi U.N. Ambassador Abdullah al-Mouallimi said that reflected Riyadh's "long-standing policy in support of moderation and in support of resolving disputes in peaceful means."
But the foreign ministry said Saudi Arabia declines to be a member of a body unable to tackle long-standing conflicts in the Middle East or rid the region of the threat of nuclear war.
It pointed specifically to the nearly three-year civil war in Syria and the protracted Palestinian-Israeli conflict, as key reasons.
"Failing to find a solution to the Palestinian cause for 65 years" it said, has led to "numerous wars that have threatened world peace."
Likewise, it said, "allowing the regime in Syria to kill its own people with chemical weapons... without confronting it or imposing any deterrent sanctions... is a proof of the inability of the Security Council to carry out its duties and assume its responsibilities."
The ministry also criticized the body's "failure" to turn the Middle East into a region free from weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear arms -- in a reference to Iran and Israel.
Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia is a fierce critic of Shiite Iran's nuclear program, which the West and Israel suspect of seeking to develop a nuclear weapon, a charge Tehran denies. Israel is the sole, if undeclared, nuclear power in the region.
Saudi Arabia is a major backer of rebels trying to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad who is allied to Tehran.
Riyadh has been a vocal critic of the U.N.'s handling of the conflict in Syria, where a peaceful movement that called for reforms emerged in March 2011 and was met with a brutal repression. It quickly escalated into civil war.
Last month, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal refused to speak or even hand out a copy of his speech at the U.N. General Assembly in anger over the Security Council deadlock on Syria and Palestine.
"It was a sign of the frustration felt," said Nawaf Obaid, a visiting fellow at Harvard University's Belfer Center and an advisor to Saudi officials.
Five countries have permanent seats on the Security Council -- the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China. The other 10 seats are awarded for two-year periods by the General Assembly, which holds a vote every year for five of the seats.
Saudi Arabia was chosen by the 193-member U.N. General Assembly, along with Chile, Chad, Lithuania and Nigeria.
Security Council powers had cautiously welcomed Saudi Arabia's election.
"Having them on the Security Council allows you to debate those issues in a way which you can't if they are not on the council," said one U.N. diplomat.
Thanks GOD! please retract that offer !
Can you just imagine Saudi Arabia taking part in preserving world's peace and security?! This is exactly as giving a seat to Iran!!
Gosh...
its just a shame people in this world still have to understand freedom. and i wish that for you.
still i think as many that KSA, IRAN and your ignorance are the same.
below are two links (beyond many other social issues) to compare them together when it comes to "preserving justice".
http://stopthedeathpenalty.wordpress.com/
http://dmnewsi.com/2013/01/13/reporters-notebook-scores-of-foreign-women-on-death-row-in-saudi-arabia/
Well said my friend. KSA and IRAN are exactly the same, they're just the Sunni and Shia sides of the same extremist coin!
The KSA is correct, there is a double standard ... If "crimes against humanity" and terrorism were punished the KSA, the USA and Israel would be suspended from the UN immediately and charged by the ICC.
All the US does at the UN is push their imperialism while shielding Israel from the consequences of their crimes against humanity.
In the meantime the US uses drones to terrorize innocent people while invoking sanctions that are nothing but collective punishment.
The UN would work just fine without the hypocrisy and bullying that the US brings to the table ...
mckinl... you forget that the UN security council is composed of China and russia, two allies of iran and syria... they have veto power so why is that they do nothing against israel too?
you blame the USA but strangely forget the allies of the countries you worship....
double standards? LOL
@ anonymetexasusa
Of course the US wouldn't be replaced by Iran and North Korea. I would replace the US with some South American countries such as Bolivia and Ecuador ... South America is pulling away from the US-EU hegemony.
@ peace
It is obvious you do not know how the UN works ... It wasn't Russia and China that blocked condemnation of Israel for Apartheid crimes. As a member of the Permanent 5 on the UN Security council the US has the right, by itself, to block action against Israel.
just like russia and china can block resolutions in favor of israel by vetoing them... LOL
so don't make believe that UN is only an american organisation, that's all i m saying....
@Mckinl.
we are not judging KSA on its treatment of prisonners or women. We are judging its foreign policy. Imagine Iran as the leader of the arab world instead of KSA. We would have terrorist milicias undermining the state in each country. Iran is a farce. The mollahs forced their rule on the great iranian people there and pretend to play democracy while a disconnected medieval leader calls the shots and support terrorism in the region.
Mark my words. Iran as it is today, will not last 10 years.
What does Iran have to do with Saudi crimes? Iran has never claimed to be an Arab country as they are Persian.
The KSA and Iran are two different files yet you try to conflate the two as being connected ...
The Kingdom of Terrorism offered a position on the UN Security Council? God Bless the West. We are definitely heading towards the end of days. What a shame and disgrace. A nation that supports the worst form of terrorism and fundamentalism and is the source of such. This country should be nuked not offered a position on the UN. How can this be? A nation which doesn't respect let alone allow free practice of religion and free speech and democracy. A nation which considers non-muslims infidels is offered a position on the UNSC. Wooohooo wake up people.
beware of the sleeping masses: this is a result of the US not taking action on the Syrian regime, and it is going to go up in crescendo.
The fact of the matter The UN is the booty for the victors of WW2, and is decades past needing reform plus where is Muslim representation?
when the ksa is out of oil relatively soon it will revert to riding donkeys and being a barren desert
its only job is sponsoring terrorism@ producing oil@ and being the symbol of puppetry and silence regarding arab oppression by israel and the us. TRUTH.
this is official--Southern is a complete tool. How is Iran a model democracy? You could have said that Saddam lived in a democracy because he had elections--mind you he got something like 99.97% of the vote. Just because there are elections does not make it a democracy.
And Iran has never been a pillar of human rights--look at the countries and groups it sponsors. You would think that these groups/countries mirror its benefactor--you know, the way you claim wahhabi/salafis reflect their sponsors. You can't lose that hypocrite label ever with your train of thought.
Most, if not all, members of the the U.N. Security Council have conflicting and competing interests... Not sure is the timing is right.