Board of Peace and India’s global vision2Photo1Video© hindustantimes.com

Board of Peace and India’s global vision

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As a founding UN member, India has worked to change a stagnant status quo, hoping to contribute to it alongside other countries as an architect-reformer, as a rule-shaper. India not only championed the UN Charter’s core tenets through eight terms on the Security Council and extensive peacekeeping, but also drove tangible institutional innovation — co-founding the UN Democracy Fund, establishing the UN Peacebuilding Commission, and crafting a new UN Human Rights Council.

Our persistent advocacy for a more representative and effective UN Security Council draws from the belief that institutions must evolve to retain legitimacy. Yet, such evolution must reinforce the UN Charter’s pillars of sovereign equality and collective decision-making.

The Board of Peace does not represent a reform of this system. Its charter centralises and sharply concentrates unbridled power, commercialises influence by linking permanent membership to a mandatory contribution of a billion US dollars, and is designed to favour unilateral leadership over negotiated consensus. This structurally flawed design weakens the very foundations India has sought to strengthen.