U.N. Security Council rejected a Russian resolution on Ukraine's suffering that did not mention the invasion
The United Nations Security Council on Wednesday soundly voted down a Russian resolution that said there was a growing humanitarian crisis in Ukraine leaving millions in need of food, water and shelter but failed to mention it was Russia’s invasion that had caused it.
Thirteen of the 15 members on the council voted against the resolution. China was the only country on the council to support it.
“It really is unconscionable that Russia would have the audacity to put forward a resolution asking the international community to solve a humanitarian crisis that Russia alone created,” said Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N.
The vote came as the General Assembly reconvened an emergency session to hear a resolution submitted by Ukraine with the backing of 90 countries — including the U.S. and its European allies. The resolution called out Russia for causing the crisis, urged a cessation of hostilities and focused on the protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure, humanitarian aid access and potential spillover from the conflict in terms of food insecurity.
“We ask all those who stand against the war to vote with us,” said Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.N. “It will send a powerful message to stop the humanitarian crisis and make the aggressor stop its war.”
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