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Ukraine Seeks To Blunt Russia's UN Veto Power


Vitaly Churkin, Russia's ambassador to the United Nations, votes to veto on a draft resolution for establishing a tribunal to prosecute those responsible for downing the MH17 flight during a UN Security Council meeting in New York in July.
Vitaly Churkin, Russia's ambassador to the United Nations, votes to veto on a draft resolution for establishing a tribunal to prosecute those responsible for downing the MH17 flight during a UN Security Council meeting in New York in July.

Ukraine has stepped up its effort to restrict Russia's use of its veto in the UN Security Council, which Kyiv says has enabled the Kremlin to block international action to punish Moscow for "aggression."

In a resolution unanimously adopted on September 16, the Ukrainian parliament called for urgent reform of the Security Council, in which Russia holds veto powers as one of the five permanent members.

"There is convincing evidence of the urgency to reform the veto [system] to prevent its abuse," the Verkhovna Rada resolution said.

It said the veto has too often been used to "cover up the crime of aggression by a permanent member of the UN Security Council."

The resolution urged UN member states to take "all possible measures to stop the Russian aggression against Ukraine."

Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine last year after sending in troops and staging a referendum denounced by about 100 UN member states as illegitimate, and has supported separatists in a conflict with Ukrainian forces that has killed more than 7,900 people since April 2014.

In July, Russia blocked a resolution that would have established a tribunal to try those suspected of responsibility for the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine, which killed all 298 people aboard.

Kyiv and the West suspect separatists shot the jet down with a Russian-supplied missile system.

Last year, it vetoed a resolution criticizing the secession referendum in Crimea.

Also in July, Russia blocked a resolution that would have declared the Srebrenica massacre in Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1995, in which some 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed, to be genocide.

The Ukrainian campaign appears to be an effort to build on a French effort to persuade the other four permanent members -- Britain, China, Russia, and the United States -- not to use their veto when action is required to address a mass atrocity.

The French initiative attracted attention after Russia and China used their veto power last year to block a resolution asking the International Criminal Court to investigate crimes committed in Syria, where Moscow has backed President Bashar al-Assad throughout a devastating civil war.

On September 4, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko told Voice of America that Russia should be stripped of its veto power in the UN Security Council.

Russia has criticized both the French initiative and the Ukrainian campaign.

"We stand in favor of preserving rights for the five permanent Security Council members," state-run Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov as saying.

Interfax quoted Russia's UN ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, as saying the French initiative had a "political subtext."

"We disapprove of this initiative, assuming that the right to veto is an utmost important mechanism to make the permanent members work on finding consensual solutions, and this brings success in a great number of cases."

Kyiv's efforts to see Moscow stripped of its veto power come ahead of Russian President Vladimir Putin's first appearance at the UN General Assembly session in 10 years, amid persistent tension over the conflict in Ukraine and signs of a Russian military buildup in Syria.

Putin is expected to speak at the General Assembly on September 28, a day before Poroshenko.

With reporting by AFP, RIA Novosti, and Interfax
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