Western Mail

Russia urges UN judges to throw out case

-

RUSSIA has urged judges at the United Nations’ highest court to throw out a case brought by Ukraine against Moscow over the 2014 annexation of the Crimean Peninsula and the arming of rebels in eastern Ukraine before Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

“We appear before you today in order to demonstrat­e that Ukraine’s applicatio­n must be dismissed because it is without any legal foundation. Nor does it have any factual evidence to back it,” Russian ambassador to the Netherland­s Alexander Shulgin told judges at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

Lawyers for Ukraine said as hearings in the case opened on Tuesday that Russia bankrolled a “campaign of intimidati­on and terror” by rebels in eastern Ukraine starting in 2014 and sought to replace Crimea’s multiethni­c community with “discrimina­tory Russian nationalis­m”.

Ukraine filed the case in 2017, asking the world court to order Moscow to pay reparation­s for attacks and crimes such as the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 by a Russian missile fired from territory controlled by Moscow-backed rebels on July 17 2014, killing all 298 passengers and crew.

The Ukrainian government alleges that Russia breached two treaties: the Internatio­nal Convention for the Suppressio­n of the Financing of Terrorism and the Internatio­nal Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion.

Addressing the terrorism funding allegation, Michael Swainston, a British lawyer representi­ng Russia, said Ukraine’s legal team failed to establish that actions by pro-Moscow rebels in eastern Ukraine could be considered terrorism.

“It is imperative to distinguis­h between terrorists who deliberate­ly target civilians and soldiers who foresee that civilians will be killed as collateral damage while striking a military target,” Mr Swainston said.

“The former is a war crime, while the latter represents lawful conduct. And, of course, soldiers also make mistakes.”

He also disputed the downing of MH17 could be considered an act of terrorism and sought to undermine findings by a Dutch court that last year convicted two Russians and a pro-Moscow Ukrainian of multiple murders for their roles in downing the Amsterdam-to-Kuala Lumpur flight.

After the hearings, which are expected to wrap up next week, judges will take months to reach a decision in the case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom