Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'Rogue' Vote: Armenia Backs Ally Russia Over UN Resolution On Ukrain

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 'Rogue' Vote: Armenia Backs Ally Russia Over UN Resolution On Ukrain

    'ROGUE' VOTE: ARMENIA BACKS ALLY RUSSIA OVER UN RESOLUTION ON UKRAINE

    http://armenianow.com/commentary/analysis/53083/armenia_united_nations_general_assembly_vote_ukrai ne_russia_crimea
    ANALYSIS | 28.03.14 | 09:39

    UN Photo

    By NAIRA HAYRUMYAN
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    The United Nations General Assembly on Thursday reaffirmed Ukraine's
    territorial integrity and recognized as illegal the referendum in
    Crimea that led to the peninsula's annexation by Russia.

    Armenia voted against the anti-Russian resolution among 11 other
    nations most of which are classed by the West as 'rogue regimes'.

    Among them are Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Russia, Syria,
    Sudan, Zimbabwe, Venezuela and Nicaragua. A hundred nations voted in
    favor of the resolution, while 58 countries, including Brazil, South
    Africa, China, India, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Algeria, Vietnam, Egypt,
    Uzbekistan and others, abstained from the vote. Several traditional
    allies of Russia decided to opt out of the vote at all.

    Among them are Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Israel, Serbia
    and others.

    Many observers have described yesterday's vote at the UN as 'political
    segregation' as countries must decide who they side with - Russia,
    which is being subjected to increasingly stringent sanctions, or the
    West. Armenia has apparently chosen Russia and got itself in the list
    of countries that the Western community considers to be 'rogue states'
    and periodically subjects them to various sanctions.

    The day before the vote RFE/RL's Armenian Service, quoting a source at
    the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, published a report according to which
    Armenia had decided to abstain during the UN vote on Ukraine. This
    caused a sigh of relief in Armenia as many considered such a position
    to be optimal. However, later Foreign Ministry spokesman Tigran
    Balayan in an interview with the Russian news agency Regnum said
    that Armenia is not in the habit of declaring in advance about how
    it will vote. It became clear that Armenia would vote against the
    anti-Russian resolution.

    In an explanatory note before the vote Armenia's Representative
    to the UN Karen Nazaryan said: "Armenia has consistently and over
    years taken a principled position on the promotion of democracy,
    freedoms and rights, including and in particular the equal rights
    and self-determination of peoples as universal values and principles,
    embraced by this Assembly, based on the UN Charter."

    Some Armenian experts also pointed out that Armenia could not
    vote "for" the UN resolution, because having the problem of a
    self-determined, but unrecognized Karabakh, it could not support the
    priority of the principle of territorial integrity over the right of
    peoples to self-determination. However, a vote "against", according
    to some observers, may result in the West extending its sanctions
    also to Armenia.

    It is even more so alarming considering that such votes are also
    planned at the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) session
    in Strasbourg on April 7. The Assembly will consider depriving Russia
    of its right to vote or suspending its membership. Deputy head of the
    Russian delegation to the PACE Leonid Slutsky said that Russia itself
    may move to withdraw from the PACE so that it is not "expelled under
    enthusiastic hooting". Armenia will also need to clarify its position
    in this upcoming vote.

    Armenia is connected with Russia with very binding treaties, moreover,
    the Armenian authorities evince a sort of personal loyalty to the
    Russian leadership. Each vote at the UN was very important to Moscow.

    After the vote representative of the Russian Federation to the
    UN Vitaly Churkin noted with satisfaction that Russia was not in
    isolation.

    However, everyone seems to understand that too close ties with Russia
    will inevitably lead to the worsening of the situation in Armenia.

    Armenian Economy Minister Vahram Avanesyan said that if the sanctions
    against Russia continue, Armenia will have to revise some of its
    economic indicators.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X