UN rights chief warns of $77m funding shortfall

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Funding cuts from donor states mean that people will suffer, said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

Funding cuts from donor states mean that people will suffer, said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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GENEVA The United Nations Human Rights Office faces a dire financial crisis with a shortfall of at least US$60 million (S$77 million) in 2025 due to funding cuts from donor states, its head said on June 11.

“I will not be able to staff 11 countries with a human rights presence... It will mean that people will suffer as a result,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk told reporters in Geneva.

His OHCHR department has received US$179 million of its US$246 million annual regular budget so far for 2025, a shortfall of US$67 million, it said.

Its extra-budgetary budget projects stand at US$209 million, which is US$60 million less than in 2024.

Mr Turk pointed to efforts to relocate some staff to regional offices such as Vienna, Beirut and Panama City to both save costs and bring staff closer to the countries in their brief.

“I hope that political leadership around the world, including in Europe, wakes up to that reality, and my call on them is to support the human rights course, strategically, politically, but also financially,” Mr Turk said.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees and multiple UN agencies are grappling with major funding cuts due to significant donors slashing contributions, particularly the United States, which has annually provided nearly a quarter of the UN budget.

The upcoming 59th session of the Human Rights Council had to make 250,000 Swiss francs’ (S$392,000) worth of savings, according to its president, and reduce the duration of the meeting by 2½ days to save money.

“I am concerned... Diplomacy is about listening to each other... It happens when people meet in Geneva in the corridors,” the president of the Human Rights Council, Ambassador Jurg Lauber, told reporters in Geneva.

“We have now reached a level where we need to take different approaches. We may have to do further cuts,” he added.

The council’s gathering begins on June 16 in Geneva. REUTERS

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