Russia strongly condemned at UN after Putin
orders troops into eastern Ukraine
Ukraine’s foreign minister appealed for strong
sanctions as the only way of stalling further Russian encroachment
Julian
Borger in Washington and Andrew Roth in Moscow
Tue 22 Feb
2022 09.09 GMT
Russia
faced western sanctions and bitter condemnation at the United Nations after
Vladimir Putin ordered troops over the Ukrainian border into Moscow-controlled
territories in the east of the country, which he had recognised hours earlier.
With
reports of Russian armoured columns advancing into the Donetsk and Luhansk
regions under the guise of “peacekeepers” in the Russian-backed enclaves, the
US imposed some limited sanctions and warned more would come on Tuesday. The UK
is also due to unveil its own package of punitive measures.
Both the US
and UK believe that the Russian entry into the eastern tip of Ukraine is a
precursor for a more sweeping invasion.
“This is
the moment – the moment to stand up and defend the United Nations and our
international order as we know it,” Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador
to the UN, said. She cast doubt on Putin’s assertion that the Russian troops would
take on a “peacekeeping” role in the Donetsk and Lugansk areas. “He calls them
peacekeepers. This is nonsense. We know what they really are,” she said.
Russian
lawmakers will likely approve the Kremlin decision on Tuesday. Observers are
concerned over the exact borders of the territories that Russia has recognised
as independent.
“The open
question is what particular borders they’re going to defend,” said Andrei
Kortunov, the director general of the Russian International Affairs Council, a
Russian thinktank.
If Russia
did back further territorial claims, he said, that would “definitely mean a
war”.
The US
withdrew its remaining diplomats in Ukraine on Monday, deploying them to
Poland, as Putin’s move rattled markets around the world.
The UK’s
ambassador, Dame Barbara Woodward, told the UN meeting: “Russia has brought us
to the brink. We urge Russia to step back”, and warned that an invasion would
unleash “the forces of war, death and destruction” on the people of Ukraine.
Ukraine’s foreign
minister, Dmytro Kuleba, appealed for strong sanctions as the only way of
stalling further Russian encroachment.
“World
capitals don’t sleep now, regardless of their time zones,” Kuleba said on
Twitter. “Ukraine insists: further Russian actions rely on how the world
reacts. Russia must be in no doubt that the world talks the talk and walks the
walk on sanctions.”
Ukraine’s
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, made a defiant late night address to his
nation, after the first reports of Russian troops were crossing into the
country, into enclaves controlled by Moscow since 2014.
“We are on
our land. We don’t fear anything or anyone. We don’t owe anything to anyone.
And we won’t give anything up,” Zelenskiy said.
Pro-Russian
activists react in a street in Donetsk<br>Pro-Russian activists react in
a street as fireworks explode in the sky, after Russian President Vladimir
Putin signed a decree recognising two Russian-backed breakaway regions in
eastern Ukraine as independent entities, in the separatist-controlled city of
Donetsk, Ukraine February 21, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
At the UN,
Ukraine’s permanent representative, Sergiy Kyslytsya, compared Putin’s decrees
recognising separatist regions in Ukraine to one for Georgia in 2008, saying:
“The copying machine in the Kremlin works very well. Who is the next among the
members of the UN?”
It was at
the UN that Russia felt its isolation most keenly, as three African council
members: Kenya, Gabon and Ghana, spoke out against Moscow’s actions for violating
Ukraine’s territorial integrity. A few weeks earlier, Kenya and Gabon had
abstained on a Ukraine-related vote.
On Monday
night, Kenya’s permanent representative, Martin Kimani, delivered a powerful
address, suggesting Russia learn to live with ethnic grievances just as African
states have done.
“Kenya and
almost every African country was birthed by the ending of empire. Our borders
were not of our own drawing,” Kimani said. “Had we chosen to pursue states on
the basis of ethnic, racial or religious homogeneity, we would still be waging
bloody wars these many decades later.”
“We
rejected irredentism and expansionism on any basis, including racial, ethnic,
religious or cultural factors. We reject it again today,” he concluded.
Russia,
which currently chairs the security council, had tried to hold the late night
meeting behind closed doors, but was overruled by a majority of council
members.
Vasily
Nebenzya, the Russian permanent representative repeated Moscow’s unfounded
claims that Ukraine was about to launch an attack on the eastern Moscow-backed
enclaves, presented as a pretext for sending in Russian troops.
“Allowing a
new bloodbath in the Donbas is something we do not intend to do,” he said.
Ukraine has denied any plans for an offensive, and independent reporting has
shown no signs that one is imminent.
India, the
United Arab Emirates and Brazil, avoided mentioning Russia at the council
session while urging negotiations. The Chinese permanent representative, Zhang
Yun, made a very brief, non-committal statement, which observers said suggested
that Beijing has yet to make up its mind.
“This reads
like a placeholder,” Bonnie Glaser, the director of the Asia programme at the
German Marshall Fund, said. “China hasn’t decided what its policy response
should be yet.”
The US
secretary of state, Antony Blinken, spoke to his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi,
on Monday night, and according to the state department, “underscored the need
to preserve Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
On Monday
night Ukrainian officials warned that Russian troops may have already entered
separatist territory. The officials said local people in the town of Makiivka,
15km west of rebel-held Donetsk, saw what appeared to be Russian armoured
vehicles on the move.
One source
– who declined to be named – said “a huge convoy of Russian armoured personnel
carriers and other equipment has been travelling for one-and-a-half hours”. It
was spotted heading north towards the city of Yasynuvata, also in the Donetsk
region.
Video
released by Ukraine appeared to show a column of military vehicles moving in
convoy along a road. The officials said it was not possible to tell if the
troops belonged to the regular Russian army, or were from Russian-controlled
separatist units.
Putin
announced the decision in a televised speech marked by the Russian leader’s
visceral anger at a country he has called a “brother nation”.
“Those who
took the path of violence, bloodshed and lawlessness did not recognise and
don’t recognise any other solution to the Donbas problem besides the military,”
Putin said. “Therefore I believe it is necessary to take a long-overdue
decision to immediately recognise the independence and sovereignty of the
Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic” – the Russian proxy
states in east Ukraine.
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