China Daily (Hong Kong)

Washington urged to pay its UN bills

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

Leaders, diplomats and leading scholars have urged Washington to halt its political manipulati­ons and pay overdue contributi­ons it owes to the United Nations as a range of the organizati­on’s global missions are grinding to a halt over financial problems.

Observers also said that many countries, including China, the second-largest financial contributo­r to UN, have paid despite the financial difficulti­es amid the COVID-19 pandemic this year to ensure the multilater­al group stays afloat financiall­y and is capable of fulfilling its mandates and program tasks.

Fifteen of 41 major UN humanitari­an programs in hard-hit Yemen have already been curtailed or closed and more will be affected in coming weeks unless additional funding is received, the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs said on its website on Oct 7.

In a letter to member states early this year, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the UN is facing serious financial difficulti­es and the arrears amount to $1.52 billion. He called on member states to pay their dues in full and on time.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said on Sept 4, “As the country with the largest cumulative arrears, the United States owes more than two-thirds of the total arrears, which is the main cause of the UN’s financial difficulti­es.”

Dai Bing, ambassador and deputy representa­tive of China to the UN, criticized the US without naming it on Friday by saying that one member state, with full capacity to pay, “still withholds its assessed contributi­ons and leverages them to serve its political agenda, pressing the UN and shifting financial burdens to other member states”.

Despite economic pressure, China has fully paid its assessed contributi­ons this year, Dai said.

Xu Yicong, a researcher at the China Foundation for Internatio­nal Studies and a former Chinese ambassador to Cuba, said China has a record of honoring its commitment­s, including those to the UN, yet some countries have used lame excuses for their failure to make payments and have even made threats and attempted blackmail.

“The US failed to make its payments not only to the UN but also to some other internatio­nal bodies, and it even threatened to quit the UN. … Such actions — owing money and using blackmail — shows the US pursuit of hegemony and unilateral­ism and poses serious threats to the world. But that shall never be allowed,” Xu said.

He said that many people in the US oppose their government not paying its UN dues, expect changes to take place and hope that the world will return to normal.

UN Undersecre­tary-General for Humanitari­an Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinato­r Mark Lowcock warned on Oct 15, “Just last week, the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on was forced to close a livestock vaccinatio­n program that was serving 3 million rural families.”

Huang Rihan, assistant dean of Huaqiao University’s College of Internatio­nal Relations, said that failures to pay UN dues have been going on for decades. The UN’s role has been weakened in recent years largely because the enthusiasm for global governance of some major countries “is waning” and they are downsizing their contributi­ons to the UN in different areas.

“In particular, the US administra­tion puts America first while losing its interest in global governance. It believes that quite a number of restraints imposed by the UN’s architectu­re fail to meet the US’ needs,” Huang said, adding that reforming the UN is needed to address the issue.

The United States owes more than two-thirds of the total arrears, which is the main cause of the UN’s financial difficulti­es.”

Hua Chunying, Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n

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