Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Russia threatens to veto West's U.N. Georgia plan

By Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Russia, at odds with Western powers over Georgia, vetoed on Monday a Western plan to extend the mandate of a U.N. mission in the former Soviet republic, in a death blow to the 130-strong observer force.
The council voted on a U.S.- and European-sponsored draft resolution that would have extended for two weeks the mandate of a U.N. mission to the Georgian breakaway zone Abkhazia, which declared independence last year after Russia's brief war with Georgia.
"There is no point in extending it because it is based on old realities," Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin told the council in an explanation of his vote against the plan.
There were 10 votes in favor and four abstentions, one of which was China. No country joined Russia in voting against.
The U.N. mission in Georgia was set up in 1993 after Abkhazia overthrew Tbilisi's rule to verify compliance of a ceasefire between Georgia and Abkhaz forces. Since its mandate, which expires at midnight New York time, has not been extended, the entire mission will be shut down.
The point of the two-week extension plan had been to give Russia and the Western members of the 15-nation council time to try to agree on a long-term plan for the U.N. mission.
Churkin told reporters earlier that Russia rejected the draft resolution because it referred to council resolution 1808 from April 2008, which reaffirms Georgia's "territorial integrity." He described the reference as "political poison."
Any mention of resolution 1808 was unacceptable, Churkin said, because it was adopted four months prior to what he described as the "Georgian aggression" against South Ossetia, the Georgian breakaway province at the center of the August 2008 Russian-Georgian war.
NOW UP TO EU MISSION?
Churkin told the council he had proposed extending the mission's mandate until July 15 to allow time for negotiations, "provided there are no offensive references in that resolution." But Western Council members rejected that idea.
Western diplomats said the decision to push for a brief mandate extension came after months of negotiations between Russia, the United States, Germany, France and Britain on a long-term plan for the mission failed to produce an agreement.
U.S. envoy Rosemary DiCarlo told the council Washington "deeply regrets" the Russian veto. She and British Deputy U.N. Ambassador Philip Parham reaffirmed their support for Georgia's territorial integrity.
Parham told reporters before the vote that if the mission was shut down, the European Union would have to think about ways to beef up its monitoring mission in Georgia.
"We the UK will certainly want to look with EU partners at the role of that mission going forward in the light of the end of U.N. mission ... and how the EU mission would be able to help to ensure that there isn't a return to conflict," he said.
The last time a resolution was vetoed was when Russia and China joined forces to strike down a U.S.-British attempt to impose sanctions on members of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's inner circle of leaders. Continued...
Source: Reuters

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