In total, 11 countries are behind on membership dues, and eight have had their right to vote suspended. Irán has blamed US sanctions for the lack of funds.
By DW
Jan 11, 2022
Irán, Venezuela and Sudan have lost their right to vote at the United Nations due to unpaid dues, UN secretary general Antonio Guterres said on Tuesday.
In total, 11 countries are behind in their payments, of which eight have lost their right to vote in the UN assembly.
The five other countries that have lost their right to vote are Antigua and Barbuda, Congo, Guinea, Papua New Guinea, and Vanuatu.
Why did the countries lose their right to vote?
Under the UN charter, if a member’s arrears equal or exceed the amount that should have been paid over the preceding two full years, the member loses its voting rights.
If the outstanding debt is deemed to be “due to conditions beyond the control of the member,” the member may still be allowed to vote. In 2022, this is the case of Comoros, Sao Tome and Principe and Somalia.
The minimum payment for Venezuela to restore its voting rights is around $40 million (€35 million), Iran must pay just over $18 million (€15.8 million), and Sudan must pay nearly $300,000 (€262,000).
The five other countries each must make a minimum payment of less than $75,000 (€65,550) to get back their vote.
Iran blasts ‘oppressive and illegal US sanctions’
In January 2021 Irán lost its vote over unpaid dues. After months of negotiations, the country was granted an exemption and got back its vote in June.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry said the country is committed to “full and timely payment of membership dues,” but that it has not been able to do pay “due to the oppressive and illegal US sanctions.”
The UN’s operating budget approved in December is around $3 billion (€2.6 billion). Its separate peacekeeping budget approved in June is around $6.5 billion (€5.7 billion).
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