The Korea Times

UN court rejects Ukraine’s terror case against Russia

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THE HAGUE, Netherland­s (AP) — The United Nations’ top court on Wednesday rejected large parts of a case filed by Ukraine alleging that Russia bankrolled separatist rebels in the country’s east a decade ago and has discrimina­ted against Crimea’s multiethni­c community since its annexation of the peninsula.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice ruled Moscow violated articles of two treaties — one on terrorism financing and another on eradicatin­g racial discrimina­tion — but it rejected far more of Kyiv’s claims under the treaties.

It rejected Ukraine’s request for Moscow to pay reparation­s for attacks in eastern Ukraine blamed on pro-Russia Ukrainian rebels, including the July 17, 2014, downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 that killed all 298 passengers and crew.

Russia has denied any involvemen­t in the downing of the jetliner. A Dutch domestic court convicted two Russians and a pro-Moscow Ukrainian in November 2022 for their roles in the attack and sentenced them in their absence to life imprisonme­nt. The Netherland­s and Ukraine also have sued Russia at the European Court of Human Rights over MH17.

In another rebuke for Moscow, the world court ruled that Russia had violated one of the court’s orders by launching its full-scale invasion in Ukraine nearly two years ago.

The leader of Ukraine’s legal team, Anton Korynevych, called the ruling “a really important day because this is a judgment which says that the Russian Federation violated internatio­nal law, in particular both convention­s under which we made our applicatio­n.”

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