Fearing fraud in polls, UN General Assembly on Wednesday called in for elections by secret ballot without a plenary meeting for non-permanent members of the Security Council.
Officials from 193-member nations came to the General Assembly chamber and filled in paper ballots to cast their vote for the five new non-permanent members of the council for the next two years. The voting began at 9:30 am (7:00 PM India time) while the results from the secret ballot are expected around 4:30 PM (2 AM on Thursday in India.)
In the African region, Kenya and Djibouti are in the fray for one seat while Canada, Ireland and Norway are in the face-off for two seats among themselves from the Western block.
For the Latin American region, Mexico appears to be assuring a seating for itself as there is no opposition. Similarly, for the Asia Pacific block, India is likely to earn an unopposed victory. ALSO READ | UN Secy General 'Concerned' Over Violence, Casualties Along LAC; Urges Nations To Exercise Restraint
Once elected again this time, India, which has been trying for a permanent seat on the expanded table, will lead its eighth term on the UN Security Council.
UN's Security Council has 15 members in a total of which, five are permanent members while 10 are non-permanent. The permanent ones - called the “P-5”—are the United States, Russia, Britain, France and China. Half the non-permanent members are elected every year, each for a two-year term, starting January 1.
WATCH | Watch top 25 news of the day in 5 minutes