The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Russian veto ends monitoring of UN’s N. Korea sanctions

-

UNITED NATIONS, United States: Russia on Thursday blocked the renewal of a panel of UN experts monitoring internatio­nal sanctions on North Korea, weeks after the body said it was investigat­ing reports of arms transfers between Moscow and Pyongyang.

The move was met with a flurry of criticism, including by South Korea’s foreign ministry, which said Russia had made an “irresponsi­ble decision” despite its status as a permanent member of the UN Security Council.

The United States called the veto by Moscow a “self-interested effort to bury the panel’s reporting on its own collusion” with North Korea.

“Russia’s actions today have cynically undermined internatio­nal peace and security, all to advance the corrupt bargain that Moscow has struck with the DPRK,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said, referring to the North by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba took to social media to call the veto “a guilty plea,” amid allegation­s that Pyongyang is aiding Moscow in its war against Kyiv.

Moscow’s veto at the Security Council does not remove the sanctions on North Korea, but spells the end for the group monitoring their implementa­tion -- and myriad alleged violations.

The panel’s mandate expires at the end of April.

North Korea has been under mounting sanctions since 2006, put in place by the UN Security Council in response to its nuclear program.

Since 2019, Russia and China have tried to persuade the Security Council to ease the sanctions, which had no expiration date.

The council has long been divided on the issue, with China’s deputy ambassador Geng Shuang arguing Thursday that the sanctions “have exacerbate­d tensions and confrontat­ion with a serious negative impact on the humanitari­an situation.”

China abstained rather than joining Russia in the veto. All other members had voted in favor of renewing the expert panel.

Russia’s UN envoy Vasily Nebenzia said that without an annual review guaranteed to assess and potentiall­y modify the sanctions, the panel was unjustifie­d.

“The panel has continued to focus on trivial matters that are not commensura­te with the problems facing the peninsula,” Nebenzia said. “Russia has called for the council to adopt a decision to hold an open and honest review of the Council sanctions... on an annual basis.”

Additional Security Council sanctions were leveled on Pyongyang in 2016 and 2017, but the North’s sanctioned nuclear and weapons developmen­t have continued.

Last week, Pyongyang tested a solid-fuel engine for a “new-type intermedia­te-range hypersonic missile,” state media reported.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia