BSS
  07 Mar 2022, 10:22

Lacking other options, UN Security Council takes watchdog role in Ukraine war

  UNITED NATIONS, United States, March 7, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Unable to assure

global peace, the UN Security Council is consigned to a watchdog role in the
Russia-Ukraine conflict, with little else to do but set more urgent sessions
this week on the crisis.

  After five meetings since Russia's invasion of its eastern European
neighbor on February 24, the 15-member council will gather again on Monday
for two sessions on humanitarian aid -- one public and one behind closed
doors.

  "Exposing the situation in the Security Council, even if you know that the
outcome is going to be stopped through a veto, is still worthwhile," said the
European Union's ambassador to the UN, Olof Skoog.

  "Pressure" is the aim, several council members told AFP, with
representatives even vying to call for sessions. The United States and
Albania joined together to convene the first meeting on the conflict, while
France and Mexico are pushing for a resolution, though its future is unclear.

  With its veto power, Russia -- one of the five permanent members of the
council that also includes 10 other members elected for two years -- has the
power to block any declaration or resolution.

  As the founding document of the organization established after World War
II, the UN Charter cannot oust one of the five permanent members even if the
state violates the body's fundamental principle of not resorting to violence
to resolve a crisis -- as Russia stands accused of doing.

  However, the charter does provide for cases in which the Security Council
can take action.

  Article 27 stipulates that a council member can abstain from voting when it
is party to a conflict on which there is a vote. In practice, this doesn't
always happen.

  Russia has never abstained from a vote on Syria -- deploying its veto some
15 times in 10 years -- nor has the United States or Britain on Iraq, France
on Mali or the United Arab Emirates over Yemen.

  "There has not been any real appetite to go after" Article 27, said a
Western ambassador on condition of anonymity.

  - 'Privilege' of permanence -

  A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson recently said that
expelling Russia from the Security Council figures among the "options."

  But in reality, "no," it's not on the table, said another diplomat, also
speaking on condition of anonymity.

  Article 6 of the UN Charter says if a member "has persistently violated the
Principles" of the document, it "may be expelled from the Organization by the
General Assembly upon recommendation of the Security Council."

  Therein lies the issue: veto-wielding Russia will never recommend its own
expulsion to the 193-member General Assembly.

  Such an attempt has only been made once in the history of the global body,
in 1974, when several countries urged the Security Council to exclude South
Africa, according to SC Procedure, a specialized news outlet.

  The resolution received 10 votes in favor, but France, Britain and the
United States vetoed, it added.

  The permanent members, which also include China, sometimes "have each
other's back," the Western ambassador said.

  "They don't agree with all substance always, but they do agree that the
privilege is something that sets them a little bit above the rest of us."

  Under the impetus of the EU, the General Assembly -- where there are no
vetoes -- had looked to succeed where the Security Council failed by adopting
a resolution condemning Russia on March 2.

  A record 141 countries from across every continent approved the non-binding
text, with just five in opposition: Russia, Belarus, Eritrea, Syria and North
Korea.

  Beyond the council and the assembly, the UN has deployed other wings to try
to help mitigate the fallout of the war.

  The UN humanitarian affairs agency OCHA, the refugees body UNHCR and the
World Food Programme have stepped up responses to the crisis, while the Human
Rights Council recently backed the creation of an international commission of
inquiry into abuses in Ukraine.

  UN chief Antonio Guterres, who has long denounced the "dysfunction" of
global governance, is working behind the scenes but to little avail so far,
having offered mediation to Russia, which rebuffed any idea of the secretary-
general going to Moscow, according to an official.