The seats of representatives of all countries are arranged in alphabetical order by country name. Initially, it was sorted by A-Z, but the problem was that the representatives of countries with lower initials always ranked lower.
Now the general assembly adopts the lottery system to solve the seating problem. This method does not draw 192 Member States from beginning to end, but the Secretary-General draws lots to select one, that is, the country sitting in the first seat (to the right of the President's seat) to decide which letter to start with in this year's General Assembly seat. In this way, all countries have an equal opportunity to be at the front, and then other countries will arrange their seats in alphabetical order by country name. Therefore, at each session of the United Nations General Assembly, the seats of delegates are not always fixed.
If the first letter of the names of two countries is the same, look at the second letter; And so on.