Saudi Arabia wins UN Security Council seat

Published October 17th, 2013 - 04:23 GMT
Saudi Arabia still needs approval from two-thirds of the General Assembly to secure its non-member UNSC status (Courtesy of the UN)
Saudi Arabia still needs approval from two-thirds of the General Assembly to secure its non-member UNSC status (Courtesy of the UN)

For the first time, Saudi Arabia on Thursday has won a seat as a non-permanent member in the UN Security Council, Al Arabiya reported.

Saudi Arabia has joined Chad, Chile, Lithuania and Nigeria who took seats in an election. The five new non-permanent members will be replacing Azerbaijan, Guatemala, Morocco, Pakistan and Togo on the 15-nation council on January 1st and for the upcoming two years.

While the new five countries were elected unopposed, they still needed approval from two-thirds of the General Assembly to secure their seats.

Al-Riyadh newspaper’s Editor-in-chief, Yusuf al-Kuwailet, told Al Arabiya that Saudi Arabia’s interfaith dialogue initiative has helped the kingdom to win the seat.

In 2011, Saudi Arabia founded King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz International Centre for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue, a non-profit and non-governmental organization in Vienna.

Saudi Arabia winning the seat will double kingdom’s responsibility towards regional issues especially when it comes to the Syrian conflict, Kuwailet added.

He emphasized that  the kingdom will not change its policies towards Syria.

The five permanent members, who hold vetoes, are the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China - and 10 temporary members without veto power.

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