Russia, a permanent member of 15-nation Council, exercised the veto yesterday when a draft resolution drafted by France, the United Kingdom and the US was tabled here.
While 10 of the Council's 15 members voted in favour, Russia rejected the text, as permanent member China, as well as non-permanent members Ethiopia and Kazakhstan abstained.
"...With its veto, Russia said no to accountability. Russia said no to cooperation with the UN's independent investigation. And Russia said no to a resolution that would have helped promote peace in Syria," US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley said after the resolution was failed to be adopted.
This was the 8th time during Syria's six-year-old civil war that Moscow used its veto power to block a resolution against Assad's government.
The resolution would have strongly condemned "the reported use of chemical weapons in the [Syria], in particular the attack on Khan Shaykhun," the site of last week's incident that has drawn increasing global attention.
The measure would also had called on the Syrian government to comply with relevant recommendations of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapon's (OPCW) Fact Finding Mission (FFM) and the OPCW-UN Joint Investigative Mechanism (JIM).
The US Secretary of State was considering that proposal, he said, adding that the whole gamut of issues would be discussed by OPCW on April 13 at The Hague.
Putting the draft to a vote a day before that would serve no useful purpose, he emphasised.
"I'm amazed that this was the conclusion. No one has yet visited the site of the crime. How do you know that?" he said. He said the US attack on the Syrian air base "was carried out in violation of international norms".
Haley said the UN Joint Investigative Mechanism and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons have told it many times that Assad will not provide access to investigate.
"Russia said this resolution was biased and that the Assad regime was not involved. This resolution simply emphasised the information the regime is already required to provide to investigators," she said.
"Today's vote could have been a turning point. Once more, this vote could have been the moment when Russia saw that its interests do not lie with a murderous dictator, but rather with the many countries in the international community, including those across the Middle East, that want to end this conflict. By its failure, Russia will continue to be isolated," she added.
"We've once again encountered a Russian veto, the 8th time that Russia has used its veto to protect the Syrian regime. This one is even more regrettable given that Russia was the architect of the 2013 agreement to dismantle Syria's chemical weapons programme, an initiative that has demonstrably failed," Rycroft said.
"It is indefensible that Russia has chosen to protect the perpetrators of these attacks rather than work with the rest of the international community to condemn them," he added.
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