"I call on the world community to unite and achieve UN reform so that all the 193 UN member states would be alternately represented in the Security Council. It is necessary to eliminate the division into permanent and non-permanent members of the UN Security Council. It can comprise 20 states," Erdogan said, stressing that each ten of the 20 members should be replaced every two years, as quoted by the Anadolu news agency.
The issue of UN Security Council enlargement was raised in 1994 and has been largely disputed since then. To date the UN member states still disagree on a range of aspects of the possible reform, including the number of Security Council members, distribution of seats and maintaining division into permanent and non-permanent members.
Currently the Council consists of five permanent, veto-wielding members — Russia, the United States, the United Kingdom, China and France — and 10 non-permanent, rotating members.