UN to slash a quarter of peacekeepers globally over lack of funds
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Washington is the UN's largest peacekeeping contributor, accounting for more than 26 per cent of funding.
PHOTO: EPA
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NEW YORK – The UN will cut a quarter of its peacekeepers in nine operations around the world in the coming months due to a lack of money, senior UN officials said on Oct 8, as future funding from the US remains uncertain.
“Overall, we will have to repatriate... around 25 per cent of our total peacekeeping troops and police, as well as their equipment, and a large number of civilian staff in missions will also be affected,” said a senior UN official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
That would amount to between 13,000 and 14,000 troops and police, the official said.
Washington is the UN’s largest peacekeeping contributor, accounting for more than 26 per cent of funding, followed by China, which pays nearly 24 per cent. These payments are not voluntary.
The US was already US$1.5 billion (S$1.94 billion) in arrears before the new financial year began on July 1, said a second UN official. Washington now also owes an additional US$1.3 billion, taking its total outstanding bill to more than US$2.8 billion.
The US has told the UN that it will make a payment soon of US$680 million, the first UN official said. The US mission to the UN did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
US President Donald Trump in August unilaterally cancelled about US$800 million in peacekeeping funding appropriated for 2024 and 2025, according to a Trump administration message to Congress.
The White House budget office has also proposed eliminating funding for UN peacekeeping missions in 2026, citing failures of operations in Mali, Lebanon and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The peacekeeping operations affected are in South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, Kosovo, Cyprus, the Central African Republic, Western Sahara, the Golan Heights demilitarised zone between Israel and Syria and Abyei – an administrative area jointly run by South Sudan and Sudan.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is also more broadly seeking ways to improve efficiency and cut costs as the world body turns 80 in 2025 amid a cash crisis. REUTERS

