IANS LIVE-'AS MAIN PLAYER ON WORLD STAGE' INDIA SURE TO BE CONTENDER FOR PLACE ON REFORMED UNSC: NEGOTIATIONS HEAD
May 6, 2025
Fixtures

No live matches found !

Result5 May 2025
Match 55
SRH
SRH
0/0 ( ov)
DC
DC
133/7 (20 ov)
No Result
Result4 May 2025
Match 54
PBKS
PBKS
236/5 (20 ov)
LSG
LSG
199/7 (20 ov)
PBKS won by 37 runs
Result4 May 2025
Match 53
KKR
KKR
206/4 (20 ov)
RR
RR
205/8 (20 ov)
KKR won by 1 run
Result3 May 2025
Match 52
RCB
RCB
213/5 (20 ov)
CSK
CSK
211/5 (20 ov)
RCB won by 2 runs
Result2 May 2025
Match 51
GT
GT
224/6 (20 ov)
SRH
SRH
186/6 (20 ov)
GT won by 38 runs
Result1 May 2025
Match 50
RR
RR
117/10 (16.1 ov)
MI
MI
217/2 (20 ov)
MI won by 100 runs
Result30 April 2025
Match49
CSK
CSK
190/10 (19.2 ov)
PBKS
PBKS
194/6 (19.4 ov)
PBKS won by 4 wickets
Result29 April 2025
Match 48
DC
DC
190/9 (20 ov)
KKR
KKR
204/9 (20 ov)
KKR won by 14 runs
Result28 April 2025
Match 47
RR
RR
212/2 (15.5 ov)
GT
GT
209/4 (20 ov)
RR won by 8 wickets
Result27 April 2025
Match 46
DC
DC
162/8 (20 ov)
RCB
RCB
165/4 (18.3 ov)
RCB won by 6 wickets
Result27 April 2025
Match 45
MI
MI
215/7 (20 ov)
LSG
LSG
161/10 (20 ov)
MI won by 54 runs
Result26 April 2025
Match 44
KKR
KKR
7/0 (1 ov)
PBKS
PBKS
201/4 (20 ov)
No result
Result25 April 2025
Match 43
CSK
CSK
154/10 (19.5 ov)
SRH
SRH
155/5 (18.4 ov)
SRH won by 5 wickets
Result24 April 2025
Match 42
RCB
RCB
205/5 (20 ov)
RR
RR
194/9 (20 ov)
RCB won by 11 runs
Result23 April 2025
Match 41
SRH
SRH
143/8 (20 ov)
MI
MI
146/3 (15.4 ov)
MI won by 7 wickets
Result22 April 2025
Match 40
LSG
LSG
159/6 (20 ov)
DC
DC
161/2 (17.5 ov)
DC won by 8 wickets
Result21 April 2025
Match 39
KKR
KKR
159/8 (20 ov)
GT
GT
198/3 (20 ov)
GT won by 39 runs
Result20 April 2025
Match 38
MI
MI
177/1 (15.4 ov)
CSK
CSK
176/5 (20 ov)
MI won by 9 wickets
Result20 April 2025
Match 37
PBKS
PBKS
157/6 (20 ov)
RCB
RCB
159/3 (18.5 ov)
RCB won by 7 wickets
Result19 April 2025
Match 36
RR
RR
178/5 (20 ov)
LSG
LSG
180/5 (20 ov)
LSG won by 2 runs

'As main player on world stage' India sure to be contender for place on reformed UNSC: Negotiations head

'As main player on world stage' India sure to be contender for place on reformed UNSC: Negotiations head

United Nations, April 18 (IANS) "As a main player on the world stage," India will surely be a contender if the size of the UN Security Council is raised to between 21 and 27 members, according to the Co-chair of the reform negotiations Tareq M.A.M. AlBanai.

He said on Thursday, "The goal of this reformed Council must be (that it is) representative and obviously, India is a main player on the world stage today."

"Surely if the decision is made that expansion of the council goes anywhere from 21 to 27 members, then surely India will be a contender in that," he added.

But he also said that "will be subject to the decision of the wider membership".

AlBanai pointed out that the UN has "a membership of 193 countries" and "the consideration is (for it to be) representative for everybody and the whole membership of the United Nations".

He recalled his visit to India last year with former Austrian Ambassador Alexander Marschik, who was then the co-chair of the negotiation process, and said he had "conversations there at the highest level".

AlBanai, the permanent representative of Kuwait, heads the reform process known formally as Intergovernmental Negotiations (IGN) and briefed reporters on the progress made.

On an issue that India has been pressing -- the adoption of a negotiating text for the IGN -- he was confident that it would be adopted.

A small group of countries known as 'Uniting for Consensus', which includes Pakistan and is led by Italy, opposes expanding permanent membership of the Council and prevents the adoption of a negotiating text to delay the reforms indefinitely.

AlBanai said, "Obviously, this process will lead us to text-based negotiations, because I think that is the least complicated part of this process."

"The most complicated part is to have consensus on what that text contains, and then putting it on paper is not really going to be that difficult to be honest with you," he said.

AlBanai did not sound very hopeful that the reform would be completed soon.

"If I were to say we can finish this in a year, I would be misleading you," he said, because of the complexity of reforms "that will be effective for the next 100 years".

While AlBanai said that 2030 -- five years from now – "is a realistic target," he added the caveat, "But I can't guarantee it by 2030 or any other year for that matter."

Speaking of the difficulties in the way of the reform process, he said it "is complex and requires patience, because whatever decisions we make, the process of amending the charter, if it requires amending the charter, is very complicated in and of itself".

"And the process needs to last with us for the next 100 years, at least, so that it can adapt to every possibility that the United Nations and the World faces," he said.

"So, let's hope that this process continues on a positive trajectory, which it has been for the last few years," he added.

He said that an open "structured dialogue" without "artificial deadlines or barriers" will help bring about consensus on reforms.