Bangkok Post

More tests needed after Churkin’s death

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NEW YORK: Medical examiners who performed an autopsy on Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations said on Tuesday more tests are needed to determine how and why he fell ill in his office and later died.

Vitaly Churkin, who died on Monday at a hospital at age 64, had been Russia’s envoy at the UN since 2006.

He was the longest-serving ambassador on the Security Council, the UN’s most powerful body.

City medical examiners concluded Churkin’s death needed further study, which usually includes toxicology and other screenings. Those can take weeks.

The medical examiner is responsibl­e for investigat­ing deaths that occur by criminal violence, by accident, by suicide, suddenly or when the person seemed healthy or in any unusual or suspicious manner. Most of the deaths investigat­ed by the office are not suspicious.

Churkin’s case was referred to the medical examiner’s office by the hospital.

Moscow has not given a date for Churkin’s funeral.

Churkin’s death brought condolence­s from diplomats and leaders around the world, with Republican US President Donald Trump calling him “an accomplish­ed diplomat”.

“While American officials sometimes disagreed with their Russian counterpar­ts, ambassador Churkin played a crucial role in working with the United States on a number of key issues to advance global security,” Mr Trump said in a statement.

Churkin’s counterpar­ts mourned him as a master in their field, saying he was deeply knowledgea­ble about diplomacy and dedicated to his country while also being a personable and witty colleague.

The UN Security Council held a moment of silence on Tuesday in Churkin’s memory. The honour was announced by the ambassador from the country holding the Security Council’s rotating presidency, Ukraine, where Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and has backed separatist rebels fighting government forces.

Ukrainian Ambassador Volodymyr Yelchenko didn’t add his own statement to the tributes to Churkin, although Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin gave condolence­s when reporters asked afterwards.

 ?? AP ?? A picture of Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the UN, is displayed while people sign condolence­s books at the Russian Mission to the UN in New York.
AP A picture of Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the UN, is displayed while people sign condolence­s books at the Russian Mission to the UN in New York.

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