South Africa to challenge the African spoilers of UN Security Council reform
6 February 2014
A low-level campaign to democratise the UN Security Council has been sputtering along for almost as long as anyone can remember. But it intensified in 2005 when then Secretary-General Kofi Annan formally threw his weight behind the reform agenda and launched formal negotiations.
In the same year, the African Union (AU) adopted the Ezulwini Consensus, including a common African position on Security Council reform that demanded at least two permanent seats and five non-permanent seats - to be allocated by the AU itself.Significantly, the AU also demanded complete equality of its proposed permanent seats with the existing five permanent seats (the P5), meaning that either none should have the veto; or all should.
First Nigeria and then South Africa threw their hats into the ring in 2005, informally declaring their candidacies for the African permanent seats if these were ever to materialise.There was a flurry of diplomatic activity after Annan's 2005 initiative in New York, but after some time it petered out because of firm resistance.
The inflexibility of the AU was cited as one of the obstacles to change. The so-called G4 coalition (Germany, Japan, India and Brazil) had mounted the strongest campaign for more permanent seats. The G4 was smart enough to realise that securing permanent seats would be hard enough without also demanding veto rights. So, they agreed to temporarily shelve the veto question for tactical reasons.