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UN GA President Labels Georgia As Aggressor, Slams U.S.

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  • UN GA President Labels Georgia As Aggressor, Slams U.S.

    UN GA PRESIDENT LABELS GEORGIA AS AGGRESSOR, SLAMS U.S.

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    17.09.2008 18:28 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A new session of the United Nations General Assembly
    has opened in New York, with a sharp attack on the United States by
    the assembly's new president.

    Former Nicaraguan foreign minister Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann mentioned
    the United States by name only a few times, but made it clear who
    his target was.

    D'Escoto says it is "undeniable" that some members of the Security
    Council have "an addiction to war," and he says they are threatening
    international peace and security. In a scarcely veiled reference
    to President George W. Bush's administration, d'Escoto also said no
    nation has the right "to decide on its own which states are sponsors
    of terrorism, and which are not."

    "It is a sad but undeniable fact that serious breaches of the peace
    and threats to international peace and security are being perpetrated
    by some members of the Security Council that seem unable to break
    what appears like an addiction to war," he said.

    "By now, over 1.2 million people have died as a direct consequence
    of that aggression and occupation," d'Escoto said about the U.S.-led
    war in Iraq.

    "They think they can operate the veto power without thinking about
    the consequences," France Presse quoted the UN GA new president as
    speaking to a Security Council representative.

    Asked by an American reporter whether Russia violated the UN Charter
    by intruding into Georgia, he said that it was Georgia that committed
    an act of aggression against South Ossetia and violated UN Charter.

    As reported by the UN news center, a team comprising representatives
    of key United Nations agencies is heading to South Ossetia and other
    areas affected by the recent conflict in Georgia, the world body
    announced today, adding that a broader fact-finding mission to the
    region is also being planned.

    The objective of the 17 to 20 September mission "is to gain first-hand
    knowledge of the humanitarian and human rights situations and needs on
    the ground, including the position of those displaced by the conflict
    and other vulnerable groups," according to a statement issued by
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson.

    The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates some 192,000
    people were forced to flee their homes during the conflict that began
    on 8 August and involved Georgia, South Ossetian and Russian forces.

    The upcoming mission, coordinated with the Russian and Georgian
    authorities, will visit Moscow, South Ossetia and Tbilisi. The results
    will feed into the revision of the nearly $59 million humanitarian
    flash appeal launched by the UN and its partners on 18 August to aid
    victims of the conflict.
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