Off the wire
Over 600,000 animals used in experiments in Switzerland: report  • 1st LD Writethru: UN Security Council fails to adopt resolution on Srebrenica massacre  • Roundup: Boko Haram increases Nigeria's nightmare  • Shareholders of banking giants vow not to reduce stock holdings  • Suspected IS enthusiasts hack Syrian activist website  • Britain revises down its economy forecast in 2015  • Syria's Assad endorses new credit line deal with Iran  • Major SOEs increase stakes amid market rout  • Slovakia says never to agree to writing off any part of Greek debt  • Urgent: UN chief welcomes direct talks between Afghan government and Taliban representatives  
You are here:   Home

(recast) 1st LD Writethru: UN Security Council fails to adopt resolution on Srebrenica massacre

Xinhua, July 9, 2015 Adjust font size:

The UN Security Council on Wednesday failed to adopt a resolution on Srebrenica massacre as Russia voted against it.

The draft resolution being put to a vote said "acceptance of the tragic events at Srebrenica as genocide is a prerequisite for reconciliation" on which the disagreement is considered to exist.

Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said before the vote that " the draft provided by the United Kingdom turned out to be not constructive, confrontational and politically motivated. It contained distortions, as the result of which the blame for the past is basically placed on one people."

The Srebrenica massacre occurred when the Army of Republika Srpska killed more than 8,000 people, mostly men and boys, in the town of Srebrenica, Bosnia, over two nights beginning on July 11 1995. The massacre is considered the worst crime committed on European soil since the end of World War II.

The massacre has weighed particularly heavily on the United Nations conscience because UN Peacekeepers had designated the town of Srebrenica as a "safe area" before the massacre occurred.

The Russian Ambassador asked the 15-member body to mourn in silence for those who were killed in the massacre before the vote. UN Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson joined the crowd.

Negotiations on the draft text were difficult. The Security Council postponed the vote twice on Tuesday in a bid to get the resolution adopted before the 20th Srebrenica anniversary on Saturday.

Liu Jieyi, China's permanent representative to the UN, said before the vote that "regarding the draft resolution to commemorate Srebrenica event, at this moment council members still have grave concerns, to force a vote on the draft resolution while major differences still remain is not in conformity with national reconciliation within Bosnia and Herzegovina and in the region at large."

"China believes the council members will well continue their exchange of views on the matter of the draft resolution and should refrain from hasty actions," he added.

The final result for the vote is ten in favor, one against and four abstained. Endite