CAMEROON โ The United States and its allies clashed with Russia and China in the U.N. Security Council on Monday over the usefulness and impact of U.N. sanctions, which are currently imposed on countries from North Korea to Yemen and Congo as well the al-Qaida and Islamic State extremist groups and their affiliates and supporters.
Russia, which holds the council presidency this meeting and chose the topic -- preventing humanitarian and unintended consequences of sanctions -- also lashed out at unilateral sanctions imposed by the United States, European Union and other countries and groups.
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U.N. political chief Rosemary DiCarlo told the council there are 14 U.N. sanctions regimes: As examples, in Libya, Mali, South Sudan and Yemen they support conflict resolution; in Guinea Bissau they aim to deter unconstitutional changes of government; in Central African Republic, Congo and Somalia they curb the illicit exploitation of natural resources that fund armed groups; in North Korea, they target proliferation activities; and they constrain Islamic State and al-Qaida terrorist threats.
DiCarlo said U.N. sanctions are no longer โthe blunt instrument they once were.โ Since the 1990s, they have undergone changes to minimize possible adverse consequences on civilians and third countries, and the Security Council has included and provided humanitarian exemptions in most sanctions regimes, she said.
Russiaโs deputy U.N. ambassador Dmitry Polyansky, who chaired the meeting, said many sanctions regimes interfere with plans for state-building and economic development, pointing to Central African Republic and Sudan and calling the measures on Guinea Bissau โanachronistic.โ
The Security Council needs โto take greater heed of what the authorities of states under sanctions thinkโ and be more realistic in setting benchmarks to lift them to make sure they donโt turn into โa mission impossible,โ he said.
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield countered that sanctions are โa potent toolโ that โmake it harder for terrorists to raise funds via international financial systems,โ and have slowed development of โcertain capabilitiesโ in North Koreaโs nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Sanctions also โconstrain the resources of those who would spoil peace processes, threaten U.N. peacekeepers, commit atrocities, and obstruct humanitarian assistance,โ she said.
Britainโs deputy ambassador James Kariyuki said the value of U.N. sanctions were proven in Angola, Ivory Coast, Liberia and Sierra Leone where โthey helped end conflict and support the transition to peace and democracyโ and were then lifted.
โIn the Central African Republic, theyโve improved the practices of a mining company,โ he said. โIn Somalia, the arms embargo has enabled the seizure of thousands of ammunition rounds, anti-tank guided missiles, and sniper-fire rifles reportedly intended for al-Shabab,โ the al-Qaida-linked extremist group.
Russiaโs Polyansky took special aim at sanctions imposed outside the U.N. by countries or groups, which he said โremain a serious impediment for full-fledged functioning of humanitarian exemptions,โ citing problems with contractors, carriers, cargo insurance and bank transactions.
He also said Russia proceeds from the understanding that only U.N. sanctions โare legitimate,โ and that broader use of unilateral sanctions โundermines the norms and institutes of the international law.โ
Polyansky claimed โsecondary sanctions of major Western powers create a `toxic vibeโ around Pyongyang" that discourages cooperation even in areas not touched by international restrictions. He also cited what he called the โwar of sanctionsโ against Russiaโs ally Syria, which has very negatively affected its economy, as well as U.S. sanctions against Cuba and Venezuela.
Chinaโs U.N. Ambassador Zhang Jun called unilateral sanctions โextremely harmfulโ and expressed concern that a few countries โhave been flinging them about left, right and center, in a frenzy so much so that they seem to be addicted to them.โ He said these measures โhave thrown a spanner in the works of economic and social development and scientific and technological progress of the targeted countries.โ
Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador, countered that the U.S. far prefers sanctions to be imposed multilaterally, including at the Security Council.
But when some council members block โcritical designations of peace process spoilers, high profile terrorists, human rights abusers, and sanctions evadersโ the United States and many other countries are prepared to act -- and to use their currency regulations and domestic financial systems โas economic leverage to address urgent global challenges such as nuclear proliferation, human rights abuses and violations, and corruption," she said.
To Russiaโs contention that sanctions imposed by individual countries may be unlawful, Thomas-Greenfield retorted, โthe United States categorically rejects that position.โ
The U.S. fully supports its partners, regional organizations including the European Union, African Union and West African regional group ECOWAS โthat impose their own sanctions in response to threats,โ she said.
France's deputy U.N. ambassador Nathalie Broadhurst said EU sanctions are โโin accordance with international law" and โdo not impede humanitarian action."