UNITED NATIONS: The 193 UN member countries, after a series of all-night
negotiations, agreed Saturday to cut the global body s budget for only
the second time in the past 50 years.An accord struck at dawn on
Saturday saw the 2012-13 budget set at $5.15 billion, down from $5.41
billion in 2010-11.The United States and crisis-stricken European
countries had fought for cuts while developing countries had demanded
spending be kept up.'All budget years are tough. But this year was
especially difficult,' UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said, welcoming
the accord and vowing more cuts in coming months. 'Governments and
people everywhere are struggling.'US negotiator Joseph Torsella called
the budget a 'historic agreement' though he acknowledged it had taken
'difficult negotiations.' Nearly every day in the past week talks have
finished at about 5:00 am.This accord 'is the first time since 1998 --
and only the second time in the last 50 years -- that the UN regular
budget has declined in comparison to the previous budget s actual
expenses,' said Torsella.He called it a 'budget for a strengthened, more
efficient, and more effective United Nations that saves the American
taxpayers millions of dollars and sets the United Nations on the path of
real fiscal discipline and continued reform.'The United States has
taken a tough line on UN spending, with Torsella this year railing at
increased salary allowances for UN staff.The UN leader acknowledged that
the global body has to 'cut fat.' It has already cut posts and
contracted out services in many departments at the New York
headquarters.Several of the UN s foreign missions saw their budget cut,
including in Ivory Coast where UN peacekeepers fought followers of
incumbent Laurent Gbagbo after he refused to stand down after losing an
election.'One year from now, I will return to you with greater cost
savings,' Ban vowed in a speech to the delegates who struck the budget
accord.
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