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  • Ankara: Election Day In UN Race, Ankara Sets Sights On Win

    ELECTION DAY IN UN RACE, ANKARA SETS SIGHTS ON WIN

    Today's Zaman
    17 October 2008, Friday
    Turkey

    The long-awaited election to select new non-permanent members for
    the UNsECurity Council in New York will take place today.

    Having been lobbying intensely for a seat on the influential world body
    for five years, Turkish officials are sitting back in their chairs,
    hoping that their efforts will bear fruit.

    "We have a clear conscience. We have done everything we could," Burak
    Ozugergin, the spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, said yesterday ahead
    of the elections. Foreign Minister Ali Babacan is still in New York for
    a final round of lobbying for Turkish membership of the 15-member UN
    Security Council. He most recently met with representatives of Asian
    and European countries, asking for their support for the Turkish bid.

    Turkey, a three-time member of the council, has been absent from the
    influential body since 1961. The elections today will determine the
    10 new temporary members of the council, selected from different
    geographical groups. The tightest race seems to be in the Western
    European and Others group, where Turkey is fighting Iceland and Austria
    for one of the two seats reserved for the group. Turkey was a temporary
    member of the council from 1951-2, 1954-5 and in 1961. Austria has
    had a seat on the body twice and Iceland wants to shed its status
    of being the only Scandinavian country never represented on the
    council. However, Iceland's current financial crisis and the near
    collapse of its currency and three largest banks are threatening
    its bid. For Turkey, a seat would mark the first time that Ankara
    represents the Western European group.

    In its first term on the UN Security Council, Turkey represented the
    Middle East region. It moved to the Eastern Europe and Asia group later
    and represented this class during its second term. Turkey has been in
    the Western European and Others group since a new arrangement of the
    grouping in the UN in 1966. And Ankara says it is high time to return
    to the Security Council after an absence of nearly a half a century.

    Since 2003, when it declared its candidacy for council membership
    in 2009-2010, Turkey has been lobbying intensely for selection when
    conducting diplomacy with the rest of the world. Relations with the
    Caribbean, Latin America and Africa, virtually nonexistent before
    2003, have come to the forefront and Ankara is now hoping that a
    number of countries from these large groups will keep their promises
    to support its bid for membership. Though the number of countries
    pledging support is well above the minimum required, 128 out of 192,
    officials are cautious, fearing that countries may well cast their
    vote differently in the closed election.

    Ankara's biggest advantage is its growing international influence
    and prestige as a regional peacemaker. Turkey has been mediating
    talks between Syria and Israel, lobbying for a regional cooperation
    platform for the Caucasus and thawing its relations with Armenia, a
    neighbor with which it has no formal ties. Ankara says as a Security
    Council member it could better help efforts to broker peace in the
    much-troubled Caucasus and the Middle East.

    But according to Ozugergin, the Turkish pro-active policy is
    more than a mere bargaining chip for membership at the UN Security
    Council. "Turkey is confident in its foreign policy and will continue
    to do what it sees best for peace and stability," he said. "These
    are not simply efforts for election to the Security Council."

    ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------

    Tu rkey's chance for UN seat worries Armenians The likelihood that
    Turkey will win a seat on the UN Security Council is causing concern
    among some Armenians, who fear Ankara might gain leverage to promote
    pro-Azerbaijani decisions and speak up against Armenia's claims of
    a genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey does not have formal ties with Armenia and has kept its border
    with the landlocked country closed since 1993 in protest of Armenian
    occupation of a part of Azerbaijani territory. Although relations
    improved after a visit by President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan in
    September, the two countries are far from restoring diplomatic ties.

    Comments in the Armenian media have said Turkey is favored to win
    the race for one of the two seats reserved for the Western European
    group on the Security Council. According to Armenian analysts, the
    Russian-Georgian crisis in the Caucasus in August boosted Turkey's
    chances for election as a regional peace broker. Media outlets also
    report that Russia, which has good ties with Turkey, and the US,
    which will need its NATO ally to press more strongly for pro-Israeli
    decisions at the UN Security Council, are also likely to support
    Turkey's bid. Ä°stanbul Today's Zaman with wires

    --Boundary_(ID_eeq4RNlRxZ0O/KGw4A8XDA)--
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