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UN rights committee adopts anti-Belarus resolution

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  • UN rights committee adopts anti-Belarus resolution

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    TASS
    April 15, 2005 Friday

    UN rights committee adopts anti-Belarus resolution

    By Konstantin Pribytkov

    GENEVA

    Western countries rallied at the UN human rights commission on
    Thursday to secure approval of an anti-Belarus resolution.

    Twenty-three out of the 53 members of the Commission voted for the
    document, with more than half the members either opposing or
    abstaining.

    However, the resolution was eventually passed, as the Commission's
    regulation allow approval by a simple majority.

    Among the states objecting to the resolution were Russia, China,
    Cuba, Armenia, Indonesia, South Africa, Egypt and some other
    countries.

    Ukraine, together with EU countries and the United States, supported
    the resolution. Before the beginning of the voting, Ukraine came out
    against the proposal by the Russian delegation not to consider the
    resolution on Belarus. As a result, Moscow's initiative was rejected
    by a margin of one vote.

    "It's a sad day for the Commission. A heavy blow was dealt to its
    reputation," Russian permanent representative at the UN's Geneva
    office Leonid Skotnikov told Itar-Tass.

    He said he was surprised at how Ukraine had voted.

    Belarussian ambassador Sergei Aleinik, for his part, stated at the
    session that the resolution was yet another attempt to present to the
    international community a distorted view of his country and excuse
    interference in its internal affairs.

    "We are disappointed and bewildered by Ukraine's vote. The neighbors
    who respect each other, do not behave themselves in this manner," the
    diplomat told reporters.

    The resolution on Belarus extends by one year the mandate of the
    human rights rapporteur, former Romanian foreign minister Adrian
    Severin.

    In the report at the present session, he pointed at that the
    Belarussian people lacked identity and claimed that the country poses
    a threat to regional security and stability.

    He also insisted on the necessity of changing the Belarus government,
    as well as on radical restructuring of the Belarussian society.

    Aside from the resolution on Belarus, Ukraine also supported the
    West-proposed resolutions on Cuba and North Korea. Russia voted
    against these documents.
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