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ADDIS ABABA, July 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Foreign ministers
of African Union (AU) member nations on Saturday agreed to seek two permanent
seats in an expanded United Nations Security Council but have not chosen the
candidates, media reports said.
The decision was made by foreign ministers of the
53-member AU at their meeting in the Libyan resort city of Sirte, according to
reports reaching here.
African leaders have drawn up a plan to demand five
seats on the UN Security Council, including two permanent ones, Said Djinnit,
AU's commissioner for peace and security, was quoted as saying at a press
conference.
The ministerial will be followed by an AU summit
scheduled for Monday and Tuesday.
"Africa has methods of selecting its representatives
and we do not expect the issue to divide the continent. We are determined that
this will be done in a way that preserves our solidarity," Djinnit said.
Brazil, Germany, India and Japan have circulated a
draft resolution calling for an increase of 10 seats in the Security Council --
six new permanent seats and four non-permanent ones.
Under the proposal of the so-called Group of Four,
four permanent seats will go to the four countries, with two other new permanent
seats to go to African nations.
The G-4's resolution has been strongly opposed by
Italy, Pakistan, South Korea, Mexico and dozens of other nations, which favor
increasing the non-permanent council seats from 10 to 20 andcall for consensus
on the council reform to avoid a rift among theUN membership. Enditem
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