United Nations, June 6: Ecuador's Foreign Minister Maria Fernanda Espinosa Garces has been elected president of the UN General Assembly. She is only the fourth woman to achieve the position in its 73-year history.

With her election on Tuesday, she follows in the pioneering footsteps of India's Vijayalakshmi Pandit, the first woman to hold the position in 1953, in an organisation struggling to achieve gender parity.

In keeping with its symbolism, Espinosa declared that she dedicates her election to all the women in the world.

Espinosa received 128 votes to defeat another woman, Honduras Permanent Representative Mary Elizabeth Flores Flake, who got 62 votes.

The Assembly presidency rotates among various groups at the UN and this year it was the turn of the Latin American and Caribbean bloc.

In a rare departure from tradition of unanimity, two candidates from the region contested the election.

Speaking to reporters after her election, Espinosa said that she will assess the work done for the Security Council reform process and the situation it is in. The reform process has been going for about 25 years and "this is very much a pending issue of the organisation," she said.

"Of course, the depth and the pace of the reform process is going to depend entirely on the political will of the member states," she added.

Speaking at the Assembly after her election, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres drew attention to the poor record of the Assembly in electing women as president with only four in its 73-year history.

After Pandit, it took 16 year before another woman, Angie Brooks of Liberia was elected in 1969 and another 37 years for Haya Rashed Al-Khalifa of Bahrain to be be elected in 2006.

"No woman from my continent, east or west, has ever held the post," Guterres said. All four women presidents are from developing countries.

In 2016, it was widely expected that a woman would be elected secretary-general with several strong women candidates in the field, but it went to a man for the ninth time.

Espinosa said that with her election she hoped the UN will make progress and men and women will have the same opportunities.

Dedicating her election, she said it was for "all the women in the world who participate in politics today and who face media and political attacks marked by machismo and discrimination" and for "women who struggle everyday to access jobs on equal terms."

There was a political undercurrent in the election with Espinosa receiving greater support from developing countries. Left-leaning Ecuador has had a tumultuous relationship with the US, while Honduras is close to Washington.

Honduras was one of only nine countries to vote with it in the Assembly in 2017 against a resolution opposing the US decision to move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and this cost it a lot of the votes of developing countries.

Although its relations with the US have been improving since President Lenin Moreno's election in 2017, Ecuador continues to give refuge in its London embassy to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, whom Washington wants extradited.

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Indore, Nov 24: Some online fraudsters got their target and timing horribly wrong on Sunday after they attempted to "digitally arrest" a senior police official with an automated call over "credit card misuse" while he was addressing a press conference in Indore in Madhya Pradesh.

"The caller informed that I had misused my credit card and as a result a case had been registered with Andheri West police station in Mumbai. I was having a press briefing at the time. I was told my bank account would be blocked and was asked to visit the police station in two hours," Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police (ADCP) of Indore crime branch Rajesh Dandotia told PTI.

The official said he told the caller he would not be able to make it to Mumbai from Indore at such short notice.

"The caller told me he would be connect me to someone from the police station. He then connected me to another person, who asked me to wait. He said he would talk to his senior officer to see if my statement could be recorded via video call. When he saw me in police uniform, he immediately disconnected the video call," the official narrated.

Dandotia said he asked media persons to record a video so that people can be made aware of such cyber crimes and digital arrest.

Digital arrest is a modus operandi of cyber criminals who threaten a person with arrest, force the person to remain confined in a room while keeping him or her under electronic surveillance and then extort money on the pretext of "clearing" him or her of charges.