Niger, 6 other countries lose right to vote in UNGA

Election of five non-permanent members of the Security Council

Wide view of the Hall during the opening of the meeting.

86th plenary meeting

Election of five non-permanent members of the Security Council [item 112(a)]

(a) By-election (A/71/896)

(b) Election of five non-permanent members of the Security Council

UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres

Niger and six other nations lost their right to vote in the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) because they have not paid their dues.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres disclosed on Tuesday following a letter to the General Assembly.

The other countries losing their UNGA voting rights are Iran, Libya, the Central African Republic, Congo Brazzaville, South Sudan, and Zimbabwe, the Jerusalem Post reported on Tuesday.

Three more countries – Comoros, Sao Tome, and Principe, and Somalia – will be allowed to continue to vote despite missing dues payments, because they sufficiently demonstrated that they are incapable of paying.

Guterres wrote a letter to General Assembly President Volkan Bozkir of Turkey that the countries in arrears to the UN will have their UNGA voting rights suspended following the UN Charter.

The Charter stipulates the suspension of voting rights if a member state fails to pay its fees for more than two years, the report said.

Under the article, a member-state in arrears in the payment of its dues in an amount that equals or exceeds the contributions of two preceding years can lose its vote in the General Assembly.

Iran owes 16.2 million dollars, more than any other country.

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Meanwhile, Iran has blamed U.S. sanctions for blocking the Islamic Republic from paying its required contribution to the UN, the newspaper reported.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said the funds designated for UN payments are frozen in two South Korean banks, due to the U.S. sanctions.

He said the Islamic Republic has a total of USD 7 billion in those banks, the report said.

Khatibzadeh demanded that the UN guarantee the payments are safely transferred without using U.S. banks.

“Given that the United States has encroached upon Iran’s international assets before, the Islamic Republic of Iran insists that the UN not use an American intermediary bank to receive our country’s membership fee.

”Alternatively, this organization guarantees the financial transfer channel,” Iran International News quoted Khatibzadeh as saying.

ANI/NAN

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