Published: 14:53, March 29, 2024 | Updated: 17:45, March 29, 2024
Russia vetoes UN draft resolution on monitoring DPRK sanctions
By Xinhua

Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations Vassily Nebenzia speaks during a UN Security Council meeting at UN headquarters in New York City, on March 25, 2024. (PHOTO / REUTERS)

UNITED NATIONS - Russia on Thursday vetoed a United Nations (UN) Security Council draft resolution extending the mandate of the Panel of Experts assisting the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) Sanctions Committee.

The US-drafted resolution won the support of 13 of the 15 members of the Security Council. Russia voted against it. China abstained.

The draft resolution would have extended the mandate of the Panel of Experts until April 30, 2025.

Russia's permanent representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia, said before the vote that the Panel of Experts has no added value.

"The panel's work has been reduced to playing along with Western approaches, replicating biased information, analyzing newspaper headlines and low-quality photos," he said. "In doing so, the panel effectively testified to its inability to develop sober assessments of the state of DPRK's sanctions regime. The panel fixated on insignificant trivialities disproportionate to the problems of the Korean Peninsula."

Russia proposed during consultations to hold an open and honest review with a view to transferring the restrictions onto an annual basis

It is obvious that over the past years, the sanctions have not helped to achieve the goals set by the international community and have not led to the normalization of the situation around the peninsula. This situation does not encourage the parties to dialogue. At the same time, the sanctions are a heavy burden for the DPRK population.

The case of the DPRK is a unique one. It is the only country under indefinite sanctions of the Security Council. Basic mechanisms for adjusting the restrictions do not work, and there are no procedures that would allow the delisting of certain individuals. All the other sanctions regimes against countries have ultimate realistic goals and are subject to regular review, he said.

Russia, therefore, proposed during consultations on the draft resolution to hold an open and honest review of the sanctions against the DPRK, with a view to transferring the restrictions onto an annual basis. This would galvanize an engaged discussion of the accumulated problems, and adapt the Security Council's restrictive measures to rapidly changing conditions. This scenario could also give Pyongyang incentives to dialogue, said the Russian ambassador.

"However, the United States and its allies did not want to heed us and did not include our ideas in the draft resolution put to a vote today. In these circumstances, we see no added value in the work of the ... Panel of Experts and cannot support the American draft resolution."