RECOGNITION OF RUSSIAN CRIMEA

n 27 March 2014, the General Assembly of the United Nation General Assembly adopted a resolution titled ‘Territorial integrity of Ukraine’ (UN 68/262) calling on States, international organisations and specialised agencies not to recognise any change in the status of Crimea or the Black Sea port city of Sevastopol, and to refrain from actions or dealings that might be interpreted as such

Countries Against (Support for Russian Crimea)

  1. Armenia
  2. Belarus
  3. Bolivia
  4. Cuba
  5. Nicaragua
  6. North Korea
  7. Russia
  8. Sudan
  9. Syria
  10. Venezuela
  11. Zimbabwe

Countries Abstaining

  1. Afghanistan
  2. Algeria
  3. Angola
  4. Antigua and Barbuda
  5. Argentina
  6. Bangladesh
  7. Botswana
  8. Brazil
  9. Brunei
  10. Burkina Faso
  11. Burundi
  12. Cambodia
  13. China
  14. Comoros
  15. Djibouti
  16. Dominica
  17. Ecuador
  18. Egypt
  19. El Salvador
  20. Eritrea
  21. Ethiopia
  22. Fiji
  23. Gabon
  24. Gambia
  25. Guyana
  26. India
  27. Iraq
  28. Jamaica
  29. Kazakhstan
  30. Kenya
  31. Lesotho
  32. Mali
  33. Mauritania
  34. Mongolia
  35. Mozambique
  36. Myanmar
  37. Namibia
  38. Nepal
  39. Nauru
  40. Pakistan
  41. Paraguay
  42. Rwanda
  43. Saint Kitts and Nevis
  44. Saint Lucia
  45. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  46. Sao Tome and Principe
  47. Senegal
  48. South Africa
  49. South Sudan
  50. Sri Lanka
  51. Suriname
  52. Swaziland
  53. Tanzania
  54. Uganda
  55. Uruguay
  56. Uzbekistan
  57. Vietnam
  58. Zambia

EU Countries (Voted Against)

Nevertheless the all-European attitude towards Crimea is being transformed but it is a rather long process. In two to five years the issue won’t be in the political agenda of Europe. European countries increasingly understand that Crimea will never return to the structure of Ukraine.

Position of EU Countries

  1. Austria, Cyprus, Hugary, Italy, Greece and Austria are united in their sympathy for Russia and advocate fo the lifting of sanctions.  
  2. France, Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands and Croatia (almost) never questioned the effectiveneness of sanctions as an EU instrument, they haven't been strong proponents either.
  3. Germany doesn’t believe any more that Crimea will be returned to Ukraine. About 25% of Bundestag members (AfD and Die Linke) directly support the recognition of the Crimean Peninsula as an integral part of Russia.
  4. Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia and Bulgaria have sent ambiguous signals vis-à-vis sanctions. Nevertheless, for the Czech Republic the Crimean issue is a close case.
  5. Ireland, Luxemburg, Belgium and Malta have shown no particular support or objection during the EU's discussion on sanctions. 

 

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