The UN Security Council resolution on Crimea vetoed by Russia on Saturday could only further worsen the Ukrainian crisis, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said.
A UN Security Council resolution, calling on countries not to
recognize the results of the Crimean referendum, “could currently
only lead to confrontation and further aggravate the situation,”
according to a statement issued Sunday by Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Qin Gang.
“This is neither in Ukraine’s interest, nor in the interest
of the international community,” the statement said. It
warned all sides against taking any steps that would make the
Ukrainian crisis worse.
Thirteen out of fifteen members of the UN Security Council voted
March 15 in favor of the resolution, saying that the referendum
in Crimea is illegitimate. Russia used its right of veto to block
the resolution, while China abstained.
Following the vote, Liu Jieyi, China’s permanent representative
to the United Nations, told the Security Council that China held
“an objective and fair position on the Ukraine issue,"
as cited by Xinhua.
Liu said Beijing vows to "continue to mediate and promote
dialogue so as to play a constructive role in bringing about a
political solution to the crisis."
The diplomat came up with three proposals. He called for setting
up an international coordination mechanism to explore
possibilities of a political settlement, urged all parties to
refrain from escalation, and asked international financial
institutions to help restore economic and financial stability in
Ukraine.
Russia’s envoy to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, explained on Saturday why Russia exercised its veto
right concerning the draft resolution on Ukraine.
“We cannot accept its basic assumption: to declare illegal
the planned March 16 referendum where there residents of the
Republic of Crimea should decide on their future,” Churkin
said. “The philosophy of the authors of the draft runs
counter to one of the basic principles of the international law –
the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples
enshrined in the Article 1 of the UN Charter.”
Crimea is holding a referendum on Sunday, with residents choosing
between the republic’s reunification with Russia or remaining
part of Ukraine with broader autonomy.
The referendum was prompted by a parliamentary coup in the
Ukrainian capital, Kiev, where President Viktor Yanukovich was
ousted from office in February. Crimean authorities did not
acknowledge the new government in Kiev as legitimate and made a
decision to hold a referendum on the region’s future.