May threatens to fine UN £30m
THERESA May last night threatened to fine the United Nations tens of millions of pounds unless it improves the way it spends aid money.
In a combative speech, the Prime Minister savaged the UN for shortcomings that ‘risk undermining the confidence of states as members and donors’.
Speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York, Mrs May said the UN suffered from a ‘seemingly unbridgeable gap between the nobility of its purposes and the effectiveness of its delivery’.
She added: ‘The UN and its agencies must win our trust by proving to us and the people we represent that they can deliver.’
She said up to 30 per cent of Britain’s core funding for the UN could be withheld unless it raises its game. This could amount to a financial penalty of about £30million a year for the institution. The threat does not cover the £2billion a year the UK gives the UN for aid and peacekeeping but it is designed to force the organisation to improve its performance.
Sources said ministers were determined to see greater transparency, efficiency and accountability over the way the UN spends British taxpayers’ money.
In a wide-ranging speech, Mrs May also took a swipe at Donald Trump for his decision to pull the US out of the Paris climate change agreement.
She attacked North Korea’s race to build a nuclear weapon and urged China to act to restrain its belligerent ally.
She also criticised Russia for warmongering in Ukraine and blocking a peace deal in Syria.
Ministers have been concerned for years about the performance of UN aid agencies. Four were stripped of funding in 2011 and a government review of aid spending last year was critical of Unesco.
The UN agency was found to be inefficient and unaccountable and was rated as ‘weak’ for the way it controlled costs and dealt with fraud.
Mrs May warned world leaders that the international system would not survive if countries continued to flout rules and treaties to suit themselves.
Theresa’s £20bn offer – Page 10