Thursday 28 December 2017

UN General Assembly approves $5.4bn budget for 2018-2019


The UN General Assembly has approved nearly 5.4 billion dollars programme budget for the UN operations in the year 2018 to 2019.
The budget covers UN activities across a range of areas, including political affairs, international justice and law, regional cooperation for development, human rights and humanitarian affairs, and public information.
The approved amount is 286 million dollars – or five per cent) – below the budget for the current two-year period 2016 to 2017 and 193 million dollars below the proposal made by the Secretary-General in October this year.
In addition to the budget, the 193-member General Assembly also adopted a number of key resolutions, including reforms in areas of peace and security, and of management, according to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN.
Speaking at the closing session, Miroslav Lajčák, the President of the General Assembly, said that progress was not measured by the number of resolutions adopted, but rather by the impact the UN made on people’s lives.
“Our work is not yet done. We have more to do next year,” he said, noting areas, including the Global Compact for Migration, the peacebuilding and sustaining peace agenda, maintaining momentum on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as well as Security Council reform.
“To have meaningful outcomes from all these processes we need to talk, and more importantly, to listen to one another.
“These agenda items represent global challenges. And multilateralism is the tool we need to solve them,” he added.
In approving the budget, the General Assembly also endorsed the proposal to move from a biennial planning and budgeting period to annual programme budget on a trial basis, as of 2020.
“This signals one of the most significant shifts in the programme planning and budgeting process of the Organisation since the 1970s,” Spokesman for the Secretary-General, Stephane Dujarric, stated.
Explaining the details of the new budget, Johannes Huisman, the Director of Programme Planning and Budget, in the Office of the Controller, said that most of the cuts were under operating or “non-post” areas, such as information technology or travel.
To a lesser extent, reductions also applied to personnel or post resources, he said.
Huisman emphasised that the UN budget would ensure that there was value for money.
“This is a reassurance we can give to the tax-payers that no stone will be left unturned to make sure that the money is spent properly and ultimately benefits the world community in the areas where the UN is needed.
(NAN)

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