The world continues to be divided into two factions on the issue of permanent seat for India in the UN. A large faction is with India which wants India to get a permanent seat in the UN. Got veto in UN. The way America, Russia, China and Britain have it. In the same way, India should also have a veto. The Prime Minister of India has also said about this many times. Russia continuously supports India. In this time’s UN session, Bhutan was one country which advocated that India should get permanent membership. Russia also advocated permanent membership. But to prevent the Third World War from happening in the world, an organization was formed in its name, the United Nations, whose founding member was Britain and India was a British colony at that time.
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Today India is the most populous country in the world. The biggest is democracy. Then why does India not have a permanent seat in the UN? Now the statement of a former Singaporean diplomat has come out regarding this. He has said that Britain should give up its chair and give that chair to India. The Britain which ruled India for 200 years. Today the economy of Britain is weaker than India. India has emerged as the fourth largest economy in the world. Recently, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has reached India with a delegation of more than 100 people. Just last month, a Free Trade Agreement or FTA was signed between India and Britain. Now, to take the same forward, the British delegation is present in India.
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Former Singapore diplomat Kishore Mahbubani has suggested that the United Kingdom (UK) should give its permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to India. He highlighted important global changes, particularly the rising economic power of China and India, and stressed that Britain’s historic role on the global stage no longer corresponds to current realities. The massive structural change we are seeing today is probably the largest in 2,000 years of history, Mahbubani said during a panel discussion on geopolitical shifts in Singapore. In the case of India and China, these changes are profound. In 1980, the combined GDP of the European Union was 10 times larger than that of China. Today, the EU and China are roughly the same size, and by 2050, the EU will be half the size of China. This is a major structural change.
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Emphasizing the growing power of India, he compared it with Britain. The former diplomat said that in the year 2000, the British economy was almost four times larger than India’s economy. Today, India is bigger than Britain, and by 2050, India will be four times bigger than Britain. He described this change as so important that a change in the structure of global power is necessary. Mahbubani, who had been Singapore’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, then called on Britain to step down politely and allow India to take its permanent seat on the UN Security Council. The British should be generous in this regard, he said.