 | | Russia says pulling out is not so simple and that they are moving as fast as they can | Russia has rejected a UN Security Council draft resolution demanding full compliance with the Georgia ceasefire, saying the text did not fully reflect a peace plan agreed to on Sunday.
The new French-proposed text, debated during an emergency council meeting on Tuesday, "demands full and immediate compliance with the ceasefire to which the parties have subscribed". It also "demands the immediate withdrawal of Russian forces to the lines held prior to the outbreak of hostilities [on August 7] and the return of Georgian forces to their usual bases". And the text reaffirms "the commitment of all member states to the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognised borders". Missing points But Vitaly Churkin, Russia's UN ambassador, made it clear that his country would not accept the text because it did not include all six points listed in the peace plan agreed to between Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, and his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev. Churkin said the six-point peace plan brokered by Sarkozy "should be reflected verbatim in the resolution". The six-point EU-brokered ceasefire plan demands the renunciation of the use of force, immediate cessation of hostilities, free access to humanitarian aid, and withdrawal of forces to pre-conflict positions, while allowing Russian to implement unspecified "additional security measures", according to the UN. It also calls for international discussions on the conflict between Georgia and the separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Churkin said he particularly objected to the absence of a provision for additional Russian security measures, and the call for immediate withdrawal of Russian forces, which he said went beyond the ceasefire deal. Propaganda charge He described the council's emergency meeting as biased against Russia. "Today in this room there's been yet another attempt to turn things on their head and portray the aggressors as the victim," he said. "There's a clear expression of propaganda in detriment to serious, important, political work which needs to be done in the security council." The US and European nations supported a Georgian appeal for the council to "act decisively" by passing the resolution. But faced with Russia's veto-welding opposition and Churkin telling the 15-member council that putting the text to a vote would be "a waste of time", no vote was called. Jean-Pierre Lacroix, France's deputy UN ambassador, said "we'll obviously see what happens in the days to come".
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