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Austria, Portugal, Trinidad and Tobago and Zimbabwe elected to UN Security Council

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 11:26 AM

June 3 (Reuters) – The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday elected Austria, Portugal, Trinidad and Tobago and Zimbabwe ​to the 15-member U.N. Security Council ‌for two-year terms starting on January 1, 2027.

A third round of voting was being held to determine who would take the fifth available seat, the ‌Philippines ​or Kyrgyzstan.

Germany, which had ⁠lobbied hard for a ⁠seat, came third for the two places contested by the Western European and Others Group, with 104 votes, against ​134 for Portugal and 131 for Austria.

The Security Council is the only U.N. ⁠body that can make ⁠legally binding decisions such as ​imposing sanctions and authorizing use of force. ​It has five permanent veto-wielding members: Britain, ‌China, France, Russia and the United States.

The remaining 10 members are elected, with five new members joining every year. This ⁠year, one comes from the Africa Group, one from the Latin American and Caribbean Group, ⁠one from ‌the Asia-Pacific Group, and two ⁠from the Western European and ​Others ‌Group.

Zimbabwe will replace Somalia, Trinidad ​and Tobago ⁠will replace Panama, while Portugal and Austria will replace Denmark and Greece. The Philippines and Kyrgyzstan are competing to replace Pakistan.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom;Editing by David Ljunggren and ​Sanjeev Miglani)