RUSSIA VETOES UN RESOLUTION ON CRIMEA

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Troops stand guard in Balaklava, Crimea, Ukraine on Saturday, March 1. AP photo
Troops stand guard in Balaklava, Crimea, Ukraine on Saturday, March 1. AP photo
A woman cuts and distributes bread in front of the Crimean parliament in Simferopol, Crimea, Ukraine. The parliament in Ukraine's crisis-hit Autonomous Republic of Crimea on Thursday voted to become part of Russia. The parliament has also set a referendum on March 16, which would ask whether the Crimea people would like to remain part of Ukraine or join Russia. Xinhua
A woman cuts and distributes bread in front of the Crimean parliament in Simferopol, Crimea, Ukraine. The parliament in Ukraine’s crisis-hit Autonomous Republic of Crimea voted to become part of Russia. The parliament has also set a referendum on March 16, which would ask whether the Crimea people would like to remain part of Ukraine or join Russia. Xinhua

MOVES IN MOTION TO BOOT RUSSIA OUT OF GROUP OF 8 NATIONS

UNITED NATIONS, March 16 — Moscow Saturday vetoed a UN Security Council draft resolution that declared invalid a planned referendum in Ukraine’s autonomous republic of Crimea on whether to break away and join Russia, Xinhua reported.

The draft resolution drawn up by the US and backed by Western countries also called on international organisations to ignore results of Sunday’s voting in Crimea, expected to be approved by the 60 percent ethnic Russian majority in the peninsula.

Before the vote, Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin recalled how Crimea was given to Ukraine by the Soviet Union in 1954 without the consideration of the people of Crimea.

“We will respect the will of the Crimean people during the March 16 referendum,” Churkin said at the open council meeting, the seventh on Ukraine in just over two weeks.

He said the current crisis in Ukraine started during “a legal vacuum rising from an unconstitutional coup d’etat carried out in Kiev by national radicals in February of 2014 as well as from the direct threat from these said individuals in stating their order across all Ukraine”.

Churkin was referring to a European-mediated peace deal signed Feb 21 between now-deposed Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych and leaders of what were then opposition parties which foresaw a national unity government and an early presidential election.

Within days of signing of the deal, Yanukovych fled Ukraine for Russia under apparent threat of life after Ukrainian parliament voted to remove him and hold new elections.

Opposition leaders quickly formed an interim government headed by Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and set elections for May 25. Moscow does not recognise the interim government in Kiev.

Shortly afterwards, reports surfaced of unidentified Russian-speaking armed forces in trucks with Russian identification plates in Crimea — Russia identified them as “self-defence” troops to protect against anti-Semitic attacks and threats to Russian speakers. The Crimean parliament later called the referendum for Sunday.

Thirteen countries in the 15-member Security Council voted in favour of the draft resolution, while China, a permanent Security Council member, abstained.

Western supporters of the draft resolution told the Security Council that Russia had sent tens of thousands of its armed forces to protect ethnic Russians it said were threatened in Crimea, where Moscow’s Black Sea fleet is based in the port of Sevastopol.

They said the referendum was being held at gunpoint.

Liu Jieyi, Chinese permanent representative to the UN, told the Security Council after the vote that “China holds an objective and fair position on the Ukraine issue”.

“The vote on the draft resolution by the Security Council at this juncture will only result in confrontation and further complicate the situation, which is not in conformity with the common interest of both the people of the Ukraine and those of the international community,” said Liu.

Russia’s veto came as no surprise after last-ditch talks between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov yielded no tangible results in London Friday.

“This is, however, a sad and remarkable moment,” Samantha Power, US ambassador to the UN, said after Saturday’s vote. “The Security Council is meeting on Ukraine because it is the job of this body to stand up for peace and to defend those in danger.”

“Under the UN Charter, the Russian Federation has the power to veto a Security Council resolution, but it does not have the power to veto the truth,” she said.

RUSSIA TO BE BE BOOTED OUT OF G8

Russia is likely to be booted out of G8 over the Ukrainian crisis as the other seven members are considering to choose London as an alternative meeting place for a G8 summit planned in Sochi, sources from the German government were quoted by the media as saying Saturday.

Seven members of the G8, namely Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain and the US, are preparing for a meeting without Russia, Xinhua cited some media reports as saying.

The British government suggested London as an alternative meeting place for a G8 meeting that includes Russia and had been scheduled to take place in Russia’s Sochi in June. Other G7 members expressed goodwill to the proposal, German government sources were quoted as saying.

Germany reportedly would also cancel the German-Russian government consultations planned to be held in Germany’s Leipzig in April if Russia does not change its path in relation to the crisis in Ukraine’s Crimea.

A spokesperson of the German government said Saturday that Germany, in agreement with other G7 countries, has suspended preparations for the G8 summit in Sochi, but said no other decisions has been made besides that.

German foreign ministry spokesperson declined to comment on the report.

The G7 as well as the European Council and the European Commission issued a joint statement March 2, blaming Russia’s position on Ukraine and declaring suspension of their preparations for the Sochi summit.

On March 6, Crimea’s Supreme Council decided to hold a referendum on March 16 on whether to join Russia or remain part of Ukraine as an autonomous republic.

Leaders of the G7 member states said Wednesday that they would not recognise the results of the referendum, according to a statement issued by the White House.

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Clarion India - News, Views and Insights about Indian Muslims, Dalits, Minorities, Women and Other Marginalised and Dispossessed Communities.

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