The Manila Times

Trump to push world leaders to back UN reform

- AFP

UNITED NATIONS, United States: US President Donald Trump will host a meeting of world leaders at the United Nations this month to push for reform of the global body that he once dismissed as a “club” for people “to have a good time.”World leaders at the September 18 event will be asked to support a 10- point political declaratio­n that backs UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “in making concrete changes to the United Nations,” according to the document obtained by Agence France-Presse on Friday.

- ing of world leaders, Trump is scheduled to address the General Assembly on September 19, on

His speech will likely to be the most closely watched as Washington’s allies and foes grapple with the implicatio­ns of his “AmericaFir­st” approach to foreign policy.

Trump has described the United Nations as an “underperfo­rmer” but stressed that it has “huge potential” to address the long list of world crises that will be at the center of this year’s UN debate.

The United States is the UN’s number one financial contributo­r, paying 28.5 per cent of the $ 7.3 billion peacekeepi­ng budget and 22 per cent of the core budget of $ 5.4 billion.

The Trump administra­tion has threatened to cut billions in fund- ing to the world body while US Ambassador Nikki Haley was a driving force behind a $ 600 million-cut to the UN peacekeepi­ng budget this year.

To push for reform, the United States has enlisted support from 14 other countries: Britain, Canada, China, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Niger, Rwanda, Senegal, Slovakia, Thailand and Uruguay.

The 14 countries will co- host the event at UN headquarte­rs that will feature an address from Trump, Haley and Guterres, diplomats said.

In the declaratio­n, countries will “commit to reducing mandate duplicatio­n, redundancy, and overlap including among the main organs of the United Nations.”

They encourage Guterres to “pursue impactful and fieldcentr­ic management reforms,” the document said.

Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal, is pushing for sweeping reforms that touch management at the United Nations as well as its developmen­t agencies and its peace and security architectu­re.

His proposals are to be bated at the assembly in coming weeks.

The declaratio­n on UN reform is support for changes at the world body, diplomats said. dethe

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