Iran's FM Araghchi Demands UNSC Reform at BRICS Meet in New Delhi

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi addressed the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi, calling for urgent reform of global governance institutions. He accused the US and Israel of targeting Iranian civilians, including an attack on Minab School before children could evacuate. Araghchi emphasized that reforming the UN Security Council is a necessity for the UN's survival, not an option. He urged BRICS to work towards creating a strategic balance and reducing dependence on monopolistic structures.

Key Points: Iran's FM Araghchi Calls for UNSC Reform at BRICS

  • Iran's FM condemns US and Israel for attacks on civilians
  • Minab School targeted before children could evacuate
  • Calls UNSC reform a necessity, not an option
  • Urges BRICS to become backbone of true multilateralism
3 min read

'Reforming Security Council not an option, but a necessity': Iran's FM Araghchi at BRICS meet

Iranian FM Seyyed Abbas Araghchi at BRICS meet in New Delhi condemns US-Israel aggression, urges UNSC reform as necessity for UN survival.

"Reforming the United Nations Security Council is not an option, but a necessity for the survival of the United Nations. - Seyyed Abbas Araghchi"

New Delhi, May 15

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi on Friday called for urgent reform of global governance institutions and condemned attacks on civilians and infrastructure in Iran during his address on the second day of the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi.

Speaking at the session titled "Rebuilding the Global Order: The Necessity of Reforming International Governance and Revival of Multilateralism," Araghchi acccused US and Israel calling them as "aggressors" for targeting Iranian civilians, schools and infrastructure during the strikes that began on February 28.

"The military aggression of the aggressors, which began at 9:30 am on Saturday, February 28, did not even give schools a chance to close and students to return to their homes," Araghchi said.

He alleged that following a "terrorist act" against Iran's Supreme Leader and the start of military "aggression", the Minab School was targeted in a second attack before children could evacuate.

He said, "The Iranian government immediately announced a nationwide school closure after the terrorist act against the Supreme Leader and the beginning of the military aggression, but the aggressors did not even give children half an hour to survive and targeted the Minab School with a second attack."

The Iranian minister also said attacks on refineries, petrochemical complexes, bridges, railways, stadiums, cultural sites, energy transmission lines and industrial facilities were attacks on "the backbone of people's daily lives."

"If today we remain silent in the face of the suffering of the Iranian people, in the face of the unjustly shed blood of citizens, in the face of the terror of children in schools in Minab, and in the face of attacks on infrastructure, tomorrow this cycle of violence and instability could spread to any other part of the world," he said.

Araghchi urged governments and international organisations to condemn attacks on civilians and infrastructure and reject what he called "double standards."

"The international community must abandon double standards and show that the life of a child in Minab is as valuable as the life of a child anywhere else in the world," he stated.

Turning to global governance, Araghchi said reforming the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) was "not an option, but a necessity for the survival of the United Nations."

"We seek a Council that truly represents all continents and regions of the world, a Council in which power is distributed responsibly and fairly, and not just in the interests of a few abusive and aggressive powers," he said.

Highlighting the role of BRICS, the Iranian foreign minister said the bloc had the potential to become "the backbone of a true multilateralism."

"In BRICS, we must work not to create a confrontational bloc, but to create a strategic balance," he said, adding that economic, financial and technological cooperation among BRICS nations could reduce dependence on "monopolistic structures" and create space for "independence and sustainable development."

"It is time to move from 'crisis management' to 'structure management'. We need an order in which peace, the product of justice and stability, is the result of universal participation," Araghchi said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
What about their own missile attacks on Israel? Double standards indeed. But yes, UNSC needs reform, India deserves a permanent seat.
V
Vikram M
The Minab School attack is heartbreaking. Children should never be targets. But where was Iran's concern when Hamas attacked Israeli civilians? Eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see BRICS positioning itself as a counterweight. India should leverage this to push for UNSC reform. But we must be careful not to become a confrontational bloc as Araghchi himself warned.
R
Rohit P
Bro, Iran is literally defending itself. US and Israel have been bombing them for years! And now they want to lecture about civilian casualties? Hypocrisy max!
K
Kavya N
The point about "crisis management" to "structure management" is profound. India has been navigating this tightrope for decades. But I worry BRICS might just become another forum for rhetoric without action. Show me the reform!
J
James A
As an observer, it's clear the world is tired of US dominance. BRICS nations representing half the world's population deserve a voice. But Iran's human rights record at home makes their moral authority questionable.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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