UN General Assembly to meet Monday on Russia 'annexation' in Ukraine

Russian Ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya attends a vote at the UN Security Council on a resolution to not recognise Russia's annexation of four Ukrainian regions, on Sept 30, 2022. PHOTO: AFP

UNITED NATIONS, United States - The United Nations General Assembly called an urgent meeting next Monday to discuss Russia's declared annexation of four partly-occupied regions of Ukraine, a UN spokeswoman said.

At the meeting, the 193 UN member states will weigh a resolution now under preparation on the annexation, after Russia vetoed a condemnation in the Security Council last week, diplomatic sources said on Tuesday.

General Assembly spokeswoman Paulina Kubiak said the body will meet at the request of Ukraine and Albania on the issue at 3pm Monday (3am on Tuesday, Singapore time).

On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Moscow had taken over four areas of Ukraine which held Kremlin-organised referendums on land seized by Russia's military.

Putin immediately drew near-global condemnation for the land grab, which came after more than seven months of devastating warfare following Moscow's Feb 24 invasion of Ukraine.

Hours later the UN Security Council met to discuss the development but Russia's ambassador vetoed a US-Albania resolution labelling the referendums "illegal" and urging all states to refuse to recognise the seized lands.

The resolution had also called on Russia to withdraw troops immediately from Ukraine.

After the veto the United States said it would take the issue to the General Assembly, where each country has a single vote and none has veto power.

Diplomatic sources said a resolution was being drafted by the European Union together with Ukraine and other countries.

If the resolution is voted through it would make clearer the degree of Moscow's isolation on the global stage, even as some developing countries have expressed annoyance that Western powers are hugely focused on Ukraine.

Earlier this year, the General Assembly passed three resolutions concerning Russia's invasion, with the third, at the end of April, revealing some erosion of international unity against Moscow. AFP

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