Following the submission
of a tough new resolution on Crimea to
the UN General Assembly on Tuesday
31 October the Foreign Minister of Ukraine, Pavlo
Klimkin is calling on the
media and other partners to focus on
the plight of the Crimean
people and in so doing
build support for the countries
new resolution to the UN.
On submitting the
new draft resolution "Situation of human rights
in the Autonomous
Republic of Crimea and the
city of Sevastopol
(Ukraine)”, Pavlo Klimkin, Minister for Foreign Affairs
of Ukraine, said:
“This new
tougher resolution is absolutely necessary
as no single
provision of our previous resolution
has yet been
implemented by Russia. This has
been confirmed in a recent report
from the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights. The
stronger document will not only
strengthen the provisions of the
2016 Resolution – it will contain important
new elements”.
“But resolutions
at the UN alone are not
enough, the world must better
understand what is happening in
Crimea and call a spade a spade. That means calling
Russia out on its criminal
behaviour and systematic abuse of human rights
on the peninsula”.
“Everyone in
the free world, not just
diplomats and politicians, must better understand what Russia is
doing. For that reason,
at the same
time as submitting
our resolution, we are launching
#CrimeaIsBleeding as a way of telling
more people what is happening
in Crimea”.
“We cannot
do this alone
so we are
asking our partners, and the
media, in particular, to help us tell
the stories of ordinary people
who suffer daily under a brutal
totalitarian regime of occupation – for the first
time in Europe
since the end of the
Second World War”.
Akhtem Chiygoz, the
Deputy Chair of the Mejlis
of the Crimean
Tatar People, who was illegally
imprisoned by Russian occupants for almost three
years, has given the campaign
his full support at a press
briefing in Kyiv to announce
the new Resolution.
Making a specific appeal
to the media
for their support Pavlo Klimkin
added:
“In a democracy,
it does not
just matter what politicians and diplomats know
and think, what really matters
is what the
people know and think. And
ordinary people from across Europe
and North America must now
better understand that on daily
basis ‘Crimea is bleeding’. In
order to achieve this, we
are appealing to the media
to help tell
the true and often harrowing
stories that are resulting every
day under a totalitarian occupying regime in a twenty-first-century European country.”
The MFA of Ukraine,
between now and Christmas, will work closely
with the Crimean community and the Ukrainian
and international media as well
as partners to bring the
plight of the Crimean people
to light.
For further details
on the new
draft resolution and to find
out more about #CrimeaIsBleeding contact MFA Press Service.