Russia would veto referral of Syria to criminal court
The announcement came after France circulated a draft resolution to U.N. Security Council members on May 12
Russia would veto a draft U.N. resolution to refer the Syrian war to the International Criminal Court if it comes to a vote in the Security Council, the Interfax news agency quoted Gennady Gatilov, the Russian Deputy Foreign Minister as saying on Tuesday.
The announcement came after France circulated a draft resolution to U.N. Security Council members on May 12 that seeks to refer the three-year-old civil war to the ICC for possible prosecution of war crimes and crimes against humanity, Reuters news agency reported.
Russia had already voiced opposition to a referral, but Gatilov’s remarks were the clearest warning yet of a veto.
“The draft that has been submitted to the U.N. Security Council is unacceptable to us, and we will not support it,” Gatilov was quoted as saying. “If it is put to a vote, we will veto it.”
Russia has been President Bashar al-Assad’s most powerful diplomatic backer during the war, blocking - along with China - three resolutions that would have condemned his government, threatened sanctions and called for war crimes accountability.
Russia and the United States initiated a peace process that led to talks between the government and its opponents, but it has faltered and Moscow’s confrontation with the West over Ukraine has further reduced the chances for success.
(With Reuters)
-
Report: Iran recruits Afghans for Syria war
In exchange, Iran is offering them stipends of $500 a month and residency permits, the Wall Street Journal reports, quoting Afghans and Western officials Middle East -
Syria’s Tartus pays respect to war victims
Tartus has itself largely escaped the conflict in Syria, but posters of its sons killed fighting for the regime elsewhere in the country line the ... Perspective -
Syria’s historic Crusader castle damaged by war
The Crac des Chevaliers once held off a siege by the Muslim warrior Saladin some 900 years ago Art and culture -
Analysis: How Syria's Assad seized momentum in war
Western leaders predicted Assad would fall in few months. Almost no one thinks that now Analysis -
Syrian official welcomes U.N. mediator's resignation
Brahimi tried unsuccessfully to mediate an end to Syria’s civil war for nearly two years Middle East -
U.N. chides donors for not enough aid to Syrian refugees
Syria's civil war has generated the worst refugee crisis since the Rwandan genocide of the mid-1990s Middle East