| POLITICS: Poor Nations
First to Pay Up U.N. Dues for 2003
Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Jan 2 (IPS) - A cash-strapped United Nations
got off to a flying start on its first working day for the
new year with 10 countries paying their dues in full for 2003.
A U.N. spokesman told IPS Thursday that what was unusual
about the early payments was that four of the 10 - Bangladesh,
Mali, Senegal and Sierra Leone - are member states designated
by the United Nations as ”least developed countries''
(LDCs), the poorest of the world's poor.
''They are the weakest segment of the international community.
But their support and commitment to the United Nations is
the strongest,'' Anwarul Karim Chowdhury, U.N. undersecretary-general
for Least Developed Countries, told IPS.
Chowdhury said it was ''wonderful'' to hear that four of
the 10 member states on the U.N.'s ''honour roll'' for 2003
were LDCs. ''The international donor community, in turn, owes
these countries its support and economic assistance for development
cooperation.''
''The LDCs are the most economically vulnerable group of
countries at the United Nations,'' he said, ''and they do
not have a level playing field.''
Currently, there are 49 LDCs, of which 33 are from sub-Saharan
Africa.
The thresholds for inclusion in the list of LDCs include:
population of less than 75 million; per capita gross domestic
product (GDP) of less than 800 dollars; and an Augmented Physical
Quality of Life Index (combining health, nutrition and education)
of less than 59.
Bangladesh paid 135,000 dollars as its total U.N. dues for
2003 followed by Mali (11,800 dollars), Senegal (67,500 dollars)
and Sierra Leone (13,500 dollars).
The other six countries in the ''honour roll'' are Armenia,
whose U.N. dues for 2003 amounted to 27,000 dollars, Belarus
with 256,000 dollars, Congo with 13,500 dollars, Honduras
with 67,500 dollars, Latvia with 135,000 dollars and Ukraine,
715,500 dollars.
The United States, the world's richest nation, is currently
the biggest single defaulter owing more than 800 million dollars
to the world body.
To date, total outstanding dues from all member states amount
to over 2.6 billion dollars, of which 1.7 billion dollars
are arrears accrued in 2002. Also in 2002, only 117 out of
a total of 191 member states paid their budget contributions
in full, compared with 135 the previous year.
The U.N.'s budget for 2002-2003 amounts to about 2.6 billion
dollars. For 2004-2005, Secretary-General Kofi Annan has proposed
a preliminary budget of about 2.9 billion dollars.
Faced with a growing cash crisis, the United Nations is currently
on an austerity drive. It has slashed some 75 million dollars
in mostly operational expenses in the U.N. secretariat in
New York.
The crisis has been prompted by two factors: first, non-payment
or delayed payment of U.N. dues by member states, and second,
outstanding arrears by some of the key contributors to the
U.N. budget, including the United States, Russia, Brazil and
Argentina.
When the General Assembly approved the 2002-2003 budget,
it was conditional on overall cuts of 75 million dollars in
operational services. The cuts include 19.7 million dollars
in general operating expenses, 10 million dollars in information
technology, 7.2 million dollars in furniture and equipment,
6.4 million dollars in contractual services, 2.8 million dollars
in staff travel, 2 million dollars in the hiring of consultants
and experts and 1.4 million dollars in supplies and materials.
Joseph Connor, the outgoing undersecretary-general for management,
says the austerity measures are necessary to conform to provisions
in a zero-growth budget.
Connor said the United Nations does not have sufficient financial
resources to maintain services for meetings, facilities management
and information technology at existing levels.
”Accordingly, staff, delegates and visitors will inevitably
experience reduction or degradation of some services,”
he said last year. The cuts, which include a ban on all after-hours
meetings, have triggered strong protests from the Group of
77 (G-77) coalition of 133 developing nations.
The G-77, the largest single group at the United Nations,
is particularly critical of limits placed on meetings of U.N.
committees and regional groups, which no longer extend beyond
6 p.m.
Since there will no staffers on duty - including interpreters
- after 6 p.m. working overtime, no meetings are being held
in the evenings or on weekends.
The only exceptions are meetings of the Security Council
and plenary meetings of the General Assembly. Even heating
in the 39th storeyed building has been kept at a minimum.
Annan has said that the secretariat will also review a number
of administrative and management procedures. One of them,
he said, is conference services.
One area that is particularly ripe for scrutiny, he pointed
out, is that of documents. ”It seems to me there is
a need to consider not only the quantity of these documents
that we currently prepare, but also the way we do it,”
he added.
The United Nations has long been known as a paper factory
because of the millions of documents it cranks out every year.
On an average it produces over 700 million printed pages every
year. The cost of printing documents both in New York and
Geneva is over 250 million dollars annually.
The amount of documents the U.N. cranks out has not decreased
appreciably despite the introduction of electronic mail and
video-conferencing.
Currently, over 300,000 U.N. documents are on U.N. websites.
(END/2003)
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