In a decisive round of voting on Tuesday, the United Nations General Assembly elected five new non-permanent members to serve on the UN Security Council, with mandates commencing on 1 January 2026 and concluding at the end of 2027. The elected states—Bahrain, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Latvia, and Liberia—secured the requisite two-thirds majority during a single round of balloting in New York.
These incoming members will join the ten-member cohort of non-permanent states that serve two-year terms on the Council, complementing the five permanent members—China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States—who retain veto powers. The Security Council remains the primary organ of the United Nations entrusted with the maintenance of international peace and security, with its resolutions bearing the weight of international law.
According to the UN, 188 member states participated in the secret ballot. Within the Africa and Asia-Pacific grouping, Bahrain received 186 votes, while the DRC secured 183 and Liberia garnered 181. One country abstained in this regional bloc. In the Eastern European group, Latvia was elected with 178 votes despite ten abstentions. In the Latin America and Caribbean region, Colombia achieved 180 votes, while eight member states abstained.
This electoral outcome reflects the standard rotation of Council membership. The new members will replace Algeria, Guyana, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, and Slovenia, whose terms are scheduled to conclude on 31 December 2025.
Notably, Latvia’s accession to the Council marks its inaugural term, signifying a diplomatic milestone for the Baltic state. The remaining four newly elected members bring varying degrees of experience: Colombia has served seven prior terms, the DRC twice, and both Bahrain and Liberia once each.
The allocation of non-permanent seats on the Council is distributed across regional lines to ensure equitable geographical representation: five seats are assigned to African and Asia-Pacific states, two to Latin America and the Caribbean, two to Western European and other states, and one to Eastern Europe. The current election involved five vacant seats—two from Africa, one from Asia-Pacific, one from Eastern Europe, and one from Latin America and the Caribbean.
The election process, governed by Article 23 of the UN Charter, requires a two-thirds majority vote of the General Assembly. Voting is conducted via secret ballot, a measure designed to safeguard diplomatic impartiality and confidentiality.
The incoming countries are expected to bring regional perspectives to global issues on the Council’s agenda, including conflict resolution, peacekeeping mandates, sanctions regimes, and the authorisation of military interventions. Their contributions will be under close scrutiny as they join ongoing deliberations on matters such as the situations in the Sahel, Gaza, Ukraine, and the Korean Peninsula.
As the world continues to grapple with evolving geopolitical tensions, the composition of the Security Council—its balance of experience, diplomacy, and regional diversity—remains a focal point of global governance and diplomacy.







