Malta Independent

8 countries including Malta accuse Russia of using North Korean missiles against Ukraine

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On Wednesday, the United States, Ukraine, Malta and five other countries accused Russia of using North Korean ballistic missiles and launchers in a series of devastatin­g aerial attacks against Ukraine, in violation of U.N. sanctions.

Their joint statement, issued ahead of a Security Council meeting on Ukraine, cited the use of North Korean weapons during waves of strikes on December 30, January 2 and January 6 and said the violations increase the suffering of the Ukrainian people, “support Russia’s brutal war of aggression, and undermine the global nonprolife­ration regime.”

The eight countries — also including France, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea and Slovenia — accused Russia of exploiting its position as a veto-wielding permanent member of the council and warned that “each violation makes the world a much more dangerous place.”

At the council meeting, Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said that the informatio­n came from U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby, but he said representa­tives of the Ukrainian air force “specifical­ly said that Kyiv did not have any evidence of this fact.”

Nebenzia accused Ukraine of using American and European weapons “to hit Christmas markets, residentia­l buildings,

women, the elderly and children” in the Russian city of Belgorod near the Ukrainian border and elsewhere.

U.N. political chief Rosemary DiCarlo told the council that Ukraine has suffered some of the worst attacks since Russia’s February 2022 invasion in recent weeks, with 69% of civilian casualties in the frontline regions of Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia.

Over the recent holiday period, she said, “Russian missiles and drones targeted

numerous locations across the country,” including the capital, Kyiv, and the western city of Lviv.

Between December 29 and January 2, the U.N. humanitari­an office recorded 519 civilian casualties, DiCarlo said: 98 people killed and 423 injured. That includes 58 civilians killed and 158 injured on December 29 in Russian drone and missile strikes across the country, “the highest number of civilian casualties in a single day in all of 2023,” she said.

The following day, at least 24 civilians were reportedly killed and more than 100 others injured in strikes on Belgorod attributed to Ukraine, she said. Russia’s Nebenzia said that a Christmas market was hit.

“We unequivoca­lly condemn all attacks against civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture, wherever they occur and whoever carries them out,” DiCarlo said. “Such actions violate internatio­nal humanitari­an law and must cease immediatel­y.”

DiCarlo lamented that “on the brink of the third year of the gravest armed conflict in Europe since the Second World War,” there is “no end in sight.”

Edem Worsornu, the U.N. humanitari­an organizati­on’s operations director, told the council that across Ukraine, “attacks and extreme weather left millions of people, in a record 1,000 villages and towns, without electricit­y or water at the beginning of this week, as temperatur­es dropped to below minus 15 degrees Celsius (59 degrees Fahrenheit).”

She said incidents that seriously impacted aid operations spiked to more than 50, “the majority of them bombardmen­ts that have hit warehouses.”

“In December alone, five humanitari­an warehouses were damaged and burned to the ground in the Kherson region, destroying tons of much needed relief items, including food, shelter materials and medical supplies,” Worsornu said.

She said that more than 14.6 million Ukrainians, about 40% of the population, need humanitari­an assistance.

In 2023, the U.N. received more than $2.5 billion of the $3.9 billion it requested and was able to reach 11 million people across Ukraine with humanitari­an assistance.

This year, the U.N. appeal for $3.1 billion to aid 8.5 million people will be launched in Geneva next week, Worsornu said, urging donors to maintain their generosity.

 ?? ?? In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, a crater of an explosion is seen next to a private building destroyed after a Russian missile attack in Novomoskov­sk, near Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine, Monday, January 8, 2024. Photo: Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP
In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service, a crater of an explosion is seen next to a private building destroyed after a Russian missile attack in Novomoskov­sk, near Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine, Monday, January 8, 2024. Photo: Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP
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