The draft expresses âgrave concernâ at the deteriorating humanitarian situation and reports of civilian casualties in and around Ukraine, and strongly condemns âattacks directed against civilians and civilian objects, including indiscriminate shelling.â
Russiaâs U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told reporters the resolution was being put in a final form that can be put to a vote on Tuesday, and a Russian diplomat said a vote could take place as early as Wednesday.
The Russian draft was circulated a day after France and Mexico announced that a humanitarian resolution on Ukraine they cosponsored, which had been discussed for two weeks in the 15-member Security Council was being moved to the 193-member General Assembly.
The France-Mexico draft resolution would demand âan immediate cessation of hostilitiesâ and deplore âthe dire humanitarian consequences of the hostilities against Ukraineâ and would almost certainly have led to a Russian veto. Those provisions are not in the proposed Russian resolution.
Franceâs U.N. Ambassador Nicolas De Riviere told reporters: âObviously, it would have been difficult in the Security Council.â
By taking the draft resolution to the General Assembly where there are no vetoes, the cosponsors lose the prospect of the resolution being legally binding, as Security Council resolutions are. But they could gain massive support for a call to halt violence and for deploring the dire humanitarian situation sparked by the war. Diplomats said Tuesday a vote in the General Assembly will take some time.
Nebenzia told reporters that the French and Mexican ambassadors knew from the beginning that âwe would be prepared to adopt a humanitarian resolution on the situation in Ukraine, provided that this is not a disguise to blame and shame Russia.â He said they know that paragraphs in Security Council draft âwhich are not humanitarianâ and shouldnât be in a humanitarian resolution.
Russian authorities maintain that they did not start the war and have repeatedly and falsely decried reports of Russian military setbacks or civilian deaths in Ukraine as fake news, as well as denouncing reports calling the offensive a war or an invasion. State media outlets and government officials insist the Russian forces only target military facilities.
Nebenzia said Russia thinks âthe chances are still thereâ for the Security Council to adopt a humanitarian resolution, so it was putting forward its own resolution âwith clear humanitarian provisionsâ and will see whether the council adopts it.
To be approved, the resolution needs at least nine âyesâ votes and no veto by another permanent council member â the United States, United Kingdom, France or China.
The Russian draft resolution also demands that âall parties concernedâ respect international humanitarian law, which requires protection of civilian infrastructure âindispensable to the survival of the civilian populationâ and âcritical to enable the delivery of essential services in armed conflict.â
It demands that all parties -- again unnamed -- ârefrain from deliberately placing military objects and equipment in the vicinityâ of civilian infrastructure or in densely populated areas, âas well as not to use civilian objects from military purposes.â
The Russian draft also calls on âall parties concerned to allow safe and unhindered passage to destinations outside of Ukraine, including to foreign nationals without discrimination,â and to facilitate humanitarian aid to all in need in and around Ukraine.
And It asks the secretary-general to report on the resolutionâs implementation within seven days âand regularly thereafter.â
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