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Saudi rejection stuns UN Security Council

Published: 19 Oct 2013 - 02:28 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 09:10 pm

UNITED NATIONS: Saudi Arabia angrily rejected a UN Security Council seat yesterday, accusing the UN body of “double standards” over the Syria war and other trouble spots in an unprecedented diplomatic assault.

The Saudi move sparked disarray at the Security Council where it only won the seat on Thursday at a UN General Assembly election.

Russia criticised the Saudis’ “strange” decision but the kingdom got a more understanding reaction from western nations.

UN leader Ban Ki-moon said Saudi Arabia did not immediately send notification of its decision to reject the term due to start on January 1.

Diplomats said it could be possible to persuade the Saudi government to reverse the decision announced in an outspoken foreign ministry statement. 

“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 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,” it added.

The government said “allowing the ruling regime in Syria to kill and burn its people” with chemical weapons is “irrefutable evidence and proof of the inability of the Security Council to carry out its duties and responsibilities.”

Saudi Arabia was one of five nations elected by the UN General Assembly on Thursday to start a two-year term on the Security Council. The others were Chad, Chile, Lithuania and Nigeria. All had stood unopposed. No country has ever won a council seat and then refused to take it up.

Saudi Arabia’s UN ambassador, Abdullah Al Mouallimi, gave several press interviews hailing the election.

But the celebrations had barely finished when the Saudi foreign ministry announced the withdrawal.

Russia boycotted council meetings in 1950 in a dispute over who represents China. The council held meetings without them.

In 1980, Cuba and Colombia failed to get a required majority in repeat General Assembly votes. The Council met with 14 members for two weeks until Mexico was finally elected.

If Saudi Arabia maintains the threat, the Asia-Pacific group of nations would have to propose a new candidate for the UN General Assembly to vote on.

Several envoys said that efforts would be made to persuade Saudi Arabia to take up its seat.

Amid the diplomatic disarray, the decision again highlighted international divisions over the Syria conflict. The Security Council passed its first resolution on the civil war in September, when it ordered the destruction of President Bashar Al Assad’s chemical weapons.

Russia and China have vetoed three other western-backed resolutions seeking to put pressure on Assad over the conflict, which the UN says has left more than 100,000 dead.

The Russian foreign ministry sharply criticised Saudi Arabia’s “strange” argument on the council’s record on Syria. 

Russia and Saudi Arabia have a traditionally testy relationship made worse by the Russia’s support for Assad while Saudi Arabia is a major backer of opposition rebels.

“We are surprised by Saudi Arabia’s unprecedented decision,” said a Russian foreign ministry statement.

“In this way, Saudi Arabia has excluded itself from collective work within the Security Council to support international peace and security.”

It added: “The kingdom’s arguments arouse bewilderment, and the criticism of the UN Security Council in the context of the Syrian conflict is particularly strange.”

However, France said several countries share Saudi Arabia’s frustration.

“We think that Saudi Arabia would have brought a very positive contribution to the Security Council, but we do also understand the frustration of Saudi Arabia,” France’s UN ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters.

“The fact is that the Security Council has been unable to act now for more than two years,” he added. Araud said the Saudi reaction is “the reflection of the frustration of a large part of the international community.”

Gregory Gause, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Doha Center who has closely followed Saudi affairs, called the action “puzzling” as Saudi Arabia had even given its diplomats special training courses to prepare for the council term.

But diplomats highlighted how Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al Faisal refused to speak or even hand out a copy of his speech at the UN General Assembly in September to show anger over handling of the Syria conflict.

“It is kind of a stamping of feet on the ground saying ‘we are here don’t forget about us, don’t ignore us,.’ But it does seem to be a very short term strategy,” Gause commented. AFP