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August 29, 2004 

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Japan for permanent security council seat

Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi will ask the United Nations to give Japan a permanent seat on the Security Council when he travels to New York next month to address the assembly.

"Reform of the UN is a crucial issue,'' Koizumi told reporters in Tokyo. "Other nations should be included on the Security Council.''

A permanent seat on the council would give Japan, the second- biggest contributor to the UN, greater say over peacekeeping operations and the use of military force to back UN resolutions. Japan's pacifist constitution prohibits its troops from fighting in any UN-mandated force.

Koizumi's decision to send Japanese troops to southern Iraq last year prompted opposition lawmakers to seek his resignation. The troops, tasked with delivering aid, were deployed in an area removed from combat and ordered to retreat if attacked.

The five permanent members of the Security Council, with the power to block any proposed resolutions, are the U.S., China, Russia, the U.K. and France. Japan, Germany and other nations defeated in World War II are excluded.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell earlier this month said Japan should revise its constitution.

``The U.S. supports our bid for a seat and they have said that isn't on condition we amend the constitution,'' Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda said at a press briefing earlier today.

Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party has begun discussions on a possible review of the war-renouncing constitution. Any changes to the document, which hasn't been amended since its creation after World War II, would require approval from two-thirds of lawmakers and a majority of voters in a national referendum.

Courtesy: Bloomberg.com, August 24.

 









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