Bengaluru, June 1: Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy ridiculed that BJP state president BS Yeddyurappa is waiting for the collapse of the JDS - Congress coalition government.

Speaking to reporters here on Friday, Kumaraswamy said that Yeddyurappa has been criticizing about the delay in expanding the cabinet in the coalition government which is not fair. In coalition government, one person cannot take all decisions. Yeddyurappa should remember the time taken by the BJP-PDP coalition government in Jammu and Kashmir to form the cabinet. Instead of worrying about cabinet expansion, he should think on working as the Opposition Leader and give suggestions to the government, he said.

Decision on ‘Kala’

The Film Chamber has already decided not to screen ‘Kala’ movie starred by Rajanikanth. But he would discuss the issue with the concerned persons and take a decision, he said.

 

Let the Truth be known. If you read VB and like VB, please be a VB Supporter and Help us deliver the Truth to one and all.



United Nations (PTI): In a sharp critique, UN chief Antonio Guterres said there is a need to recognise “we have a problem with the Security Council”, which does not reflect the current world and is not allowed to stop conflicts because of the use of veto by its permanent members.

“I think we need to recognise that we have a problem with the Security Council. The Security Council today no longer represents the world as the world exists. It represents the world after 1945,” Guterres said at a press conference in Beirut on Saturday in response to a question.

He pointed out that three permanent members of the 15-nation Council are from Europe, one from Asia, and one is the United States, while there are no permanent members from Africa or Latin America.

Even from Asia, that “obviously is a continent with an enormous weight in global population and global wealth”, there is just one permanent member - China.

“And so, the Council has a problem of legitimacy and a problem of efficiency because of the vetoes. And what we have witnessed is that time and time again, when we have situations of conflict and when it's necessary to stop the conflict, there is a veto that emerges, and that does not allow the Security Council to act. That, unfortunately, is something that we are witnessing time and time again, and I am not hoping that in the short term, things will change,” he said.

The Council is made up of five veto-wielding permanent members, China, France, Russia, the UK and the US, while 10 non-permanent members are elected to serve two-year terms at the horseshoe table and do not have veto powers.

India has been at the forefront of decades-long efforts calling for reform of the Security Council, including expansion in both its permanent and non-permanent categories, saying the 15-nation Council, founded in 1945, is not fit for purpose in the 21st Century and does not reflect contemporary geopolitical realities.

India has underscored that it rightly deserves to sit as a permanent member in the Security Council.

India last sat at the UN high table as a non-permanent member in 2021-22. A polarised Security Council has failed to deal with current peace and security challenges, with Council members sharply divided on conflicts such as the Ukraine war, the Israel-Hamas conflict and the latest US-Israel war against Iran.