Under-Secretary-General for Management Yukio Takasu, in his semi-annual overview of the Organisation's finances, told reporters on Wednesday that the top troop contributing countries to UN peacekeeping operations such as Ethiopia, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Egypt "deserve timely payment" for their contributions and participation in UN peacekeeping.
As on March 31 this year, the UN owed a total of USD 777 million to member states for peacekeeping operations.
Of this, outstanding payment for amount owed for troops, formed police units and Contingent Owned Equipment to Ethiopia was the highest at USD 64 million.
Takasu said member states who are owed outstanding payments "deserve to be reimbursed" and the organisation is "making every effort" to make the payments to the nations.
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However, as at May 3, India was among the 39 member states which had fully paid all assessments it owed to the UN.
India's Ambassador to the UN Syed Akbaruddin pointed out the lag in paying outstanding dues to member states despite the fact that the same member states had paid their dues in full.
Earlier Takasu told the UN's Fifth Committee (Administrative and Budgetary)that on the regular budget, assessments were issued in 2017 at a level of USD 2.578billion, USD 29million higher than in 2016, he said.
Payments received byApril 30, 2017 amounted to USD 1.6billion, unpaid assessed contributions by that date amounted to USD 1.4billion, USD 8million lower than a year ago.
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