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China to pay more annual dues to United Nations
Beijing(China)—China’s
increased dues to the United Nations for the next three years reflects
the country’s active participation in the affairs of the world body,
according to observers.
The 192-nation General Assembly made the decision on payment adjustments
after unanimously adopting a resolution on Friday night. The current
scale of assessments was adopted in 2000, when the General Assembly
based each country’s assessment on its gross national income (GNI),
while considering external debt and per capita income.
Under the formula, China’s dues will edge up from 2.05 per cent of the
total UN budget at US$2 billion each year to 2.67 per cent. The United
States, the world’s biggest economy and the UN’s biggest payer, will pay
22 per cent.
Japan, which has complained that its UN dues are too high and was one of
several nations seeking to tinker with the current formula, will see its
dues drop from 19.4 per cent of the total UN budget to 16.6 per cent.
It’s “natural” for China to have increasing UN dues because of its rapid
economic growth, said Ding Yuanhong, a former Chinese ambassador to the
UN.
But Ding added it is inappropriate to “directly link dues to a country’s
status or its role in the UN.” Zheng Qirong, a professor of the China
University of Foreign Affairs, said the increase in dues indicates
China’s rapid economic growth, which has drawn world attention.
“In 2006, China actively participated in UN activities and has won
acclaim from the international community,” said Wu Miaofa, a researcher
at the China Institute of International Studies.
To fulfil the UN’s millennium development goals, China has promised to
offer aid to the most underdeveloped countries or cut or cancel the
debts of some of them, although China is still a developing country, Wu
said.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |