A/RES/75/192 GA
Situation of human rights in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
75
Session
64
Yes
23
No
86
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.3/75/L.32 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/75/192 |
| Category | SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/75/192 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/75/PV.46
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Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/75/192
General Assembly
Distr.: General
28 December 2020
20-17350 (E) 050121
*2017350*
Seventy-fifth session
Agenda item 72 (c)
Promotion and protection of human rights: human
rights situations and reports of special rapporteurs
and representatives
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 16 December 2020
[on the report of the Third Committee (A/75/478/Add.3, para. 39)]
75/192. Situation of human rights in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine
The General Assembly,
Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, and
recalling the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1 international human rights
treaties and other relevant international instruments and declarations,
Recalling the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination,2 the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment3 and the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights,4
Recalling also the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 19495 and Additional
Protocol I thereto, of 1977,6 as applicable, as well as relevant customary international law,
Confirming the primary responsibility of States to promote and protect human
rights,
Reaffirming the responsibility of States to respect international law, including
the principle that all States shall refrain from the threat or use of force against the
territorial integrity or political independence of any State and from acting in any other
manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations, recalling its resolution
__________________
1 Resolution 217 A (III).
2 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 660, No. 9464.
3 Ibid., vol. 1465, No. 24841.
4 See resolution 2200 A (XXI), annex.
5 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 75, Nos. 970–973.
6 Ibid., vol. 1125, No. 17512.
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2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970, in which it approved the Declaration on Principles
of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States in
accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, and reaffirming the principles
contained therein,
Recalling its resolution 3314 (XXIX) of 14 December 1974, entitled “Definition
of aggression”,
Recalling also its resolution 68/262 of 27 March 2014 on the territorial integrity
of Ukraine, in which it affirmed its commitment to the sovereignty, political
independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally
recognized borders and called upon all States, international organizations and
specialized agencies not to recognize any alteration to the status of the Autonomous
Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol and to refrain from any action or
dealing that might be interpreted as recognizing any such altered status,
Recalling further its resolutions 71/205 of 19 December 2016, 72/190 of
19 December 2017, 73/263 of 22 December 2018 and 74/168 of 18 December 2019
on the situation of human rights in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city
of Sevastopol, Ukraine, its resolutions 73/194 of 17 December 2018 and 74/17 of
9 December 2019 on the problem of the militarization of the Autonomous Republic
of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine, as well as parts of the Black Sea and
the Sea of Azov, and relevant decisions of international organizations, specialized
agencies and bodies within the United Nations system,
Gravely concerned that the provisions of those resolutions and relevant
decisions of international organizations, specialized agencies and bodies within the
United Nations system have not been implemented by the Russian Federation,
Taking into account the consideration of its agenda item entitled “The situation
in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine”,
Condemning the ongoing temporary occupation of part of the territory of Ukraine –
the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol (hereinafter “Crimea”) –
by the Russian Federation, and reaffirming the non-recognition of its annexation,
Recalling that the General Assembly, in its resolution 3314 (XXIX), states that
no territorial acquisition or special advantage resulting from aggression is or shall be
recognized as lawful,
Affirming that the seizure of Crimea by force is illegal and a violation of
international law, and affirming also that those territories must be immediately returned,
Supporting the commitment by Ukraine to adhering to international law in its
efforts to put an end to the Russian occupation of Crimea, and welcoming the
commitments by Ukraine to protecting the human rights and fundamental freedoms
of all its citizens and its cooperation with human rights treaty bodies and international
institutions,
Recalling that organs and officials of the Russian Federation established in the
temporarily occupied Crimea are illegitimate and should be referred to as “occupying
authorities of the Russian Federation”,
Concerned that applicable international human rights obligations and treaties,
to which Ukraine is a party, are not fully respected by the occupying Power in Crimea,
thus significantly decreasing the level of human rights in Crimea since its temporary
occupation by the Russian Federation,
Reaffirming the obligation of States to ensure that persons belonging to national
or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities may exercise fully and effectively all
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human rights and fundamental freedoms without any discrimination and in full
equality before the law,
Welcoming the reports of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights on the human rights situation in Ukraine, of the Commissioner for
Human Rights of the Council of Europe and of the human rights assessment mission
of the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights and the High
Commissioner on National Minorities of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, in which they stated that violations and abuses of human
rights continued to take place in Crimea and pointed to the sharp deterioration of the
overall human rights situation,
Welcoming also the reports of the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the temporarily
occupied Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine,
submitted pursuant to resolutions 71/2057 and 72/190,8 and the reports of the
Secretary-General submitted pursuant to resolution 74/168,9
Reaffirming its grave concern that the human rights monitoring mission in
Ukraine and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Special
Monitoring Mission to Ukraine have continuously been denied access by the
occupying Power to Crimea, despite their existing mandates, which cover the entire
territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders, and emphasizing
the indispensable value that the human rights monitoring mission in Ukraine should
provide in monitoring the human rights situation in Crimea as a priority activity
according to its mandate,
Concerned about additional challenges for the enjoyment of human rights and
fundamental freedoms by residents of Crimea resulting from unnecessary and
disproportionate restrictive measures taken by the occupying Power under the pretext
of combating the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, as well as about the
lack of ensuring and maintaining public health and hygiene, including measures on
preventing the spread of COVID-19, in Crimea by the occupying Power in accordance
with the international humanitarian law,
Expressing its grave concern about the inadequate conditions of detention in
penitentiary institutions, including overcrowded cells and a lack of proper medical care,
which exposes the detainees to the risk of the spread of diseases, including COVID-19,
Recalling the prohibition under international humanitarian law for the
occupying Power to compel the inhabitants of an occupied territory to swear
allegiance to the occupying Power,
Condemning the imposition and retroactive application of the legal system of
the Russian Federation, and its negative impact on the human rights situation in
Crimea, the imposition of automatic Russian citizenship on protected persons in
Crimea, which is contrary to international humanitarian law, including the Geneva
Conventions and customary international law, and the deportation, regressive effects
on the enjoyment of human rights and effective restriction of land ownership of those
who have rejected that citizenship,
Gravely concerned by consistent reports that the Russian law enforcement
system uses involuntary placement in a psychiatric institution as a form of harassment
against and punishment of political opponents and activists,
__________________
7 See A/72/498.
8 See A/73/404.
9 A/75/334 and A/HRC/44/21.
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Deeply concerned about continued reports that the law enforcement system of
the Russian Federation conducts searches and raids of private homes, businesses and
meeting places in Crimea, which disproportionally affect Crimean Tatars, and recalling
that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights prohibits arbitrary or
unlawful interference with a person’s privacy, family, home or correspondence,
Gravely concerned that, since 2014, torture has reportedly been used by the
Russian authorities to extract false confessions for politically motivated prosecutions,
and expressing deep concern about the ongoing arbitrary detentions and arrests by the
Russian Federation of Ukrainian citizens, including Emir-Usein Kuku, Server
Mustafayev and many others,
Gravely concerned also that the occupation continues to affect the enjoyment
of social, cultural and economic rights by residents, including children, women, older
persons, persons with disabilities and other persons belonging to the groups in
vulnerable and marginalized situations,
Condemning the reported serious violations and abuses committed against
residents of Crimea, in particular extrajudicial killings, abductions, enforced
disappearances, politically motivated prosecutions, discrimination, harassment,
intimidation, violence, including sexual violence, arbitrary detentions and arrests,
torture and ill-treatment, in particular to extract confessions, and psychiatric internment,
and their forcible transfer or deportation from Crimea to the Russian Federation, as
well as reported abuses of other fundamental freedoms, including the freedoms of
expression, religion or belief and association and the right to peaceful assembly,
Deeply concerned about restrictions faced by Ukrainians, including Crimean
Tatars, in exercising their economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to
work, as well as the ability to maintain their identity and culture and to education in
the Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar languages,
Expressing concern about the militarization and assimilation of young people in
Crimea by the Russian Federation and its blocking of the access of Crimeans to
Ukrainian education,
Gravely concerned by the above-mentioned policies and practices of the
Russian Federation, which cause a continuing threat and have caused a large number
of Crimean residents to flee from Crimea,
Recalling that individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations of
protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the occupying Power, or
to that of any other country, occupied or not, and the deportation or transfer by an
occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory that it
occupies, are prohibited under international humanitarian law, regardless of their
motive,
Deeply concerned by consistent reports that the Russian Federation promotes
policies and conducts practices aimed at changing the demographic structure in
Crimea, and recalling in this respect that the occupying Power shall not deport or
transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory that it occupies,
Reaffirming the right of return of all internally displaced persons and refugees
affected by the temporary occupation of Crimea by the Russian Federation to their
homes in Crimea, and therefore stressing the need to respect their property rights and
to refrain from obtaining property in violation of applicable international law,
Concerned about additional challenges for the enjoyment of human rights by
residents of Crimea resulting from disruptive activities of the occupying Power,
including the construction of infrastructure projects accompanied by the
expropriation of land, demolition of houses and depletion of natural and agricultural
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resources, which have a negative impact on the physical character of Crimea and thus
contribute to changing the economic and demographic structure of Crimea,
Reaffirming its serious concern that, according to the decision of the so-called
“Supreme Court of Crimea” of 26 April 2016 and the decision of the Supreme Court
of the Russian Federation of 29 September 2016, the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar
People, the self-governing body of the Crimean Tatars, continues to be declared an
extremist organization and the ban on its activities has still not been repealed,
Condemning the ongoing pressure exerted upon religious minority communities,
including through frequent police raids, demolition of and eviction from buildings
dedicated to religion, undue registration requirements that have affected legal status
and property rights and threats against and persecution of those belonging to the
Orthodox Church of Ukraine, the Protestant Church, mosques and Muslim religious
schools, Greek Catholics, Roman Catholics and Jehovah’s Witnesses, and condemning
also the baseless prosecution of dozens of peaceful Muslims for allegedly belonging
to Islamic organizations,
Gravely concerned about the constant use of military courts to try civilian residents
of Crimea and the failure of the occupying Power to respect fair trial standards,
Condemning the continuous widespread misuse of counter-terrorism and
anti-extremism laws to suppress dissent,
Strongly condemning in this regard the ongoing pressure and mass detentions
on terrorism, extremism and espionage grounds and other forms of repression against
human rights defenders, civil rights activists, including against activists of the
Crimean Solidarity civic initiative, which documents abuses on the peninsula and
provides humanitarian assistance to the families of victims of politically motivated
prosecutions,
Recalling the order of the International Court of Justice of 19 April 2017 on
provisional measures in the case concerning the Application of the International
Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and of the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Ukraine
v. Russian Federation),10
Recalling also the prohibition under the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949
for the occupying Power to compel protected persons to serve in its armed or auxiliary
forces, including through pressure or propaganda that is aimed at securing voluntary
enlistment, and condemning the ongoing recruitment campaign in Crimea and
criminal prosecutions of Crimean men for draft evasion,
Recalling further that a free press, or other media, is essential to promote the
right to hold opinions and to freedom of expression and the enjoyment of other human
rights and fundamental freedoms, concerned about reports that journalists, media
workers and citizen journalists continue to face unjustified interference with their
reporting activities in Crimea, and expressing deep concern that journalists, media
workers and citizen journalists have been arbitrarily arrested, detained, prosecuted,
harassed and intimidated in Crimea as a direct result for their reporting activities,
Underlining the importance of the measures to develop transparent, accessible,
non-discriminatory and expeditious procedures and regulations governing access to
Crimea for human rights defenders, journalists, media workers and lawyers, as well
as the possibility to appeal, in accordance with national legislation and in conformity
with all applicable international law,
__________________
10 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-second Session, Supplement No. 4
(A/72/4), chap. V, sect. A.
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Condemning the blocking by the Russian Federation of Ukrainian websites and
television channels and the seizure of Ukrainian transmission frequencies in Crimea,
Welcoming the support provided by Ukraine to media outlets and civil society
organizations that have fled Crimea, which improves the ability of the media and civil
society to work independently and without interference,
Concerned about the continuing impunity in reported cases of enforced
disappearances perpetrated in Crimea,
Gravely concerned by the recent documented cases in which the Federal
Security Service of the Russian Federation allegedly tortured or ill-treated Crimean
residents following their arrests, including by using beatings, electric shocks and
suffocation against victims,
Welcoming the continued efforts of the Secretary-General, the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the Council of Europe and other international and regional
organizations to support Ukraine in promoting, protecting and ensuring human rights,
and expressing concern over the lack of safe and unfettered access by established
regional and international human rights monitoring mechanisms and human rights
non-governmental organizations to Crimea,
Acknowledging the importance of the release by the Russian Federation and
Ukraine of detained persons on 29 December 2019 and 16 April 2020, and calling
upon the Russian Federation to release all unlawfully detained Ukrainian citizens and
to ensure their safe return to Ukraine,
1.
Deplores the failure of the Russian Federation to comply with the repeated
requests and demands of the General Assembly, as well as with the order of the
International Court of Justice of 19 April 2017 on provisional measures in the case
concerning the Application of the International Convention for the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism and of the International Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination (Ukraine v. Russian Federation);
2.
Strongly condemns the continuing and total disregard by the Russian
Federation for its obligations under the Charter of the United Nations and
international law regarding its legal responsibility for the occupied territory, including
the responsibility to respect Ukrainian law and the rights of all civilians;
3.
Condemns all attempts by the Russian Federation to legitimize or normalize
its attempted annexation of Crimea, including the automatic imposition of Russian
citizenship, illegal election campaigns and voting, change of the demographic
structure of the population of Crimea and suppression of national identity;
4.
Also condemns violations, abuses, measures and practices of discrimination
against the residents of the temporarily occupied Crimea, including Crimean Tatars,
as well as Ukrainians and persons belonging to other ethnic and religious groups, by
the Russian occupation authorities;
5.
Further condemns the unlawful imposition of laws, jurisdiction and
administration in the occupied Crimea by the Russian Federation, and demands that
the Russian Federation respect obligations under international law with regard to
respecting the laws in force in Crimea prior to occupation;
6.
Urges the Russian Federation:
(a)
To uphold all of its obligations under applicable international law as an
occupying Power;
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(b)
To fully and immediately comply with the order of the International Court
of Justice of 19 April 2017;
(c)
To take all measures necessary to bring an immediate end to all violations
and abuses against residents of Crimea, in particular reported discriminatory
measures and practices, arbitrary detentions and arrests, torture and other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment, sexual and gender-based violence, including to
compel apprehended persons to self-incriminate or “cooperate” with law
enforcement, revoke all discriminatory legislation and hold accountable those
responsible for those violations and abuses;
(d)
To refrain from arresting or prosecuting Crimean residents for
non-criminal acts committed or opinions expressed, including in social media
comments or posts, before the occupation, and release all Crimean residents who have
been arrested or imprisoned for such acts;
(e)
To respect the laws in force in Ukraine, repeal laws imposed in Crimea by
the Russian Federation that allow for forced evictions and the confiscation of private
property, including land in Crimea, in violation of applicable international law, and
respect the property rights of all former owners affected by previous confiscations;
(f)
To immediately release and allow the return to Ukraine, without
preconditions, of Ukrainian citizens who were unlawfully detained and judged
without regard for the requirements of international law, as well as those transferred
or deported across internationally recognized borders from Crimea to the Russian
Federation;
(g)
To disclose the number and identity of individuals deported from Crimea
to the Russian Federation to serve criminal sentences and take immediate action to
allow the voluntary return of such individuals to Crimea;
(h)
To end the practice of placing detainees in solitary confinement cells as a
method of intimidation;
(i)
To monitor and accommodate the medical needs of all Ukrainian citizens
unlawfully detained for the exercise of their human rights and fundamental freedoms,
including political prisoners, in Crimea and the Russian Federation and allow the
monitoring of those detainees’ state of health and conditions of detention by
independent international monitors and physicians from reputable international health
organizations, including the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment and the International Committee of
the Red Cross, and investigate effectively all deaths in detention;
(j)
To uphold the rights, in accordance with international law and until their
release, of Ukrainian prisoners and detainees in Crimea and in the Russian Federation,
including those on hunger strike, and encourages it to respect the United Nations
Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela
Rules);11
(k)
To provide Ukrainian consular officials with information on Ukrainian
citizens detained in the Russian Federation, ensure freedom of consular
communication with, and consular access to, detained Ukrainian citizens, in
accordance with the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, 12 to which the Russian
Federation is a party, and allow Ukrainian officials, including the Ukrainian
Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights, to visit all Ukrainian citizens, including
political prisoners in Crimea and the Russian Federation;
__________________
11 Resolution 70/175, annex.
12 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 596, No. 8638.
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(l)
To address the issue of impunity and ensure that those found to be
responsible for violations and abuses are held accountable before an independent
judiciary;
(m) To create and maintain a safe and enabling environment for journalists and
media workers and citizen journalists, human rights defenders and defence lawyers
to perform their work independently and without undue interference in Crimea,
including by refraining from travel bans, deportations, arbitrary arrests, detention and
prosecution, and other restrictions on the enjoyment of their rights;
(n)
To respect freedom of opinion and expression, which includes the freedom
to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless
of frontiers;
(o)
To restore enjoyment of the rights of all individuals, without any
discrimination based on origin or religion or belief, revoke the decisions that banned
cultural and religious institutions, non-governmental organizations, human rights
organizations and media outlets and restore enjoyment of the rights of individuals
belonging to ethnic communities in Crimea, in particular Ukrainians and Crimean
Tatars, including that to engage in cultural gatherings;
(p)
To respect the right to be free from arbitrary or unlawful or interference
with a person’s privacy, family, home or correspondence;
(q)
To ensure that the right to freedom of opinion and expression and the rights
to peaceful assembly and freedom of association can be exercised by all Crimean
residents in any form, including single-person pickets, without any restrictions other
than those permissible under international law, including international human rights
law, and without discrimination on any grounds;
(r)
To refrain from criminalizing the rights to hold opinions without
interference and to freedom of expression and the right to peaceful assembly and
quash all penalties imposed on Crimean residents for expressing dissenting views,
including regarding the status of Crimea;
(s)
To ensure the availability of education in the Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar
languages;
(t)
To revoke immediately the decision declaring the Mejlis of the Crimean
Tatar People an extremist organization and banning its activities, repeal the decision
banning leaders of the Mejlis from entering Crimea and refrain from maintaining or
imposing limitations on the ability of the Crimean Tatar community to conserve its
representative institutions;
(u)
To end the practice of compelling Crimean residents to serve in the armed
or auxiliary forces of the Russian Federation, including through pressure or
propaganda, and in particular ensure that Crimean residents are not compelled to
participate in military operations of the Russian Federation;
(v)
To end also the practice of criminal prosecution of inhabitants of Crimea
who resists conscription into the armed or auxiliary forces of the Russian Federation;
(w) To end the practices of deporting Ukrainian citizens from Crimea for not
taking Russian citizenship, including on the basis of the application of Russian
Federation migration and correctional legislation, and of discriminating against
Crimean residents for not possessing identity documents issued by the Russian
Federation and for the use of Ukrainian identity documents, stop transferring its own
civilian population to Crimea and end the practice of encouraging such transfers;
(x)
To disclose to Ukraine full information on children who are Ukrainian
citizens left without parental care in Crimea since the beginning of the occupation of
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the peninsula, including on those children who were subsequently adopted or
transferred to foster families outside of Crimea, in order to ensure that Ukraine is able
to provide protection and care to those children;
(y)
To cooperate fully and immediately with the Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, including its Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine, which
must have safe, secure and unhindered access to the entire territory of Ukraine,
including the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, and the
Council of Europe on the situation of human rights in Crimea;
(z)
To create the conditions, as well as provide the means, to allow for the
voluntary, safe, dignified and unhindered return to their homes of all internally
displaced persons and refugees affected by the temporary occupation of Crimea by
the Russian Federation;
(aa) To provide, on a continuous basis, sufficiently detailed information on the
spread of COVID-19 in Crimea and on measures that it undertakes to ensure and
maintain public health and hygiene in Crimea, and to assist the population of these
territories in coping with the pandemic;
7.
Also urges the Russian Federation to respect the right to freedom of
religion or belief and guarantee its enjoyment by all residents of Crimea, including
but not limited to parishioners of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, Muslim Crimean-
Tatars and Jehovah’s Witnesses;
8.
Calls upon the Russian Federation to address the substantive concerns and
all recommendations highlighted in the reports of the Secretary-General and the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the situation
of human rights in the temporarily occupied Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the
city of Sevastopol, Ukraine, as well as previous relevant recommendations from
reports on the situation of human rights in Ukraine by the Office of the High
Commissioner based on the work of the United Nations human rights monitoring
mission in Ukraine established to prevent further deterioration of human rights in
Crimea;
9.
Requests the Secretary-General to continue to seek ways and means,
including through consultations with the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights and relevant regional organizations, to ensure safe and unfettered
access to Crimea by established regional and international human rights monitoring
mechanisms, in particular the human rights monitoring mission in Ukraine, to enable
them to carry out their mandate;
10. Urges the Russian Federation to ensure the proper and unimpeded access
of
international
human
rights
monitoring
missions
and
human
rights
non-governmental organizations to Crimea, including all places where persons may
be deprived of their liberty, recognizing that the international presence and
monitoring of compliance with international human rights law and international
humanitarian law in Crimea are of paramount importance in preventing further
deterioration of the situation;
11.
Supports the efforts of Ukraine to maintain economic, financial, political,
social, informational, cultural and other ties with its citizens in Crimea in order to
facilitate their access to democratic processes, economic opportunities and objective
information;
12. Calls upon all international organizations and specialized agencies of the
United Nations system, when referring to Crimea in their official documents,
communications, publications, information and reports, including with regard to
statistical data of the Russian Federation or provided by the Russian Federation, as
A/RES/75/192
Situation of human rights in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
and the city of Sevastopol, Ukraine
20-17350
10/10
well as those placed or used on official United Nations Internet resources and
platforms, to refer to “the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol,
Ukraine, temporarily occupied by the Russian Federation”, and to refer to bodies of
the Russian Federation and their representatives in Crimea as “occupation authorities
of the Russian Federation”, and encourages all States and other international
organizations to do the same;
13. Calls upon the international community to continue to support the work of
the United Nations to ensure respect for international human rights law and
international humanitarian law in Crimea;
14. Calls upon Member States to support human rights defenders in Crimea
and to continue advocacy for the respect of human rights, including by condemning
human rights violations and abuses committed in Crimea at bilateral and multilateral
forums;
15. Also calls upon Member States to engage constructively in concerted
efforts, including within international frameworks on Crimea, aimed at improving the
human rights situation in the occupied peninsula, as well as to continue to use all
diplomatic means to press and urge the Russian Federation to comply with its
obligations under international human rights law and as an occupying Power under
international humanitarian law and to grant unimpeded access to Crimea for
established regional and international human rights monitoring mechanisms, in
particular the human rights monitoring mission in Ukraine and the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine;
16. Requests the Secretary-General to remain actively seized of the matter and
to take all steps necessary, including within the Secretariat, to ensure the full and
effective coordination of all United Nations bodies with regard to the implementation
of the present resolution;
17. Also requests the Secretary-General to continue to provide his good offices
and pursue his discussions relating to Crimea, involving all relevant stakeholders and
including the concerns addressed in the present resolution;
18. Further requests the Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly
at its seventy-sixth session on the progress made in the implementation of the present
resolution, including options and recommendations to improve its implementation,
and to submit for consideration an interim report to the Human Rights Council at its
forty-seventh session, to be followed by an interactive dialogue, in accordance with
Council resolution 41/25 of 12 July 2019;13
19. Decides to continue its consideration of the matter at its seventy-sixth
session under the item entitled “Promotion and protection of human rights”.
46th plenary meeting
16 December 2020
__________________
13 See Official Records of the General Assembly, Seventy-fourth Session, Supplement No. 53
(A/74/53), chap. V, sect. A.
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UN Project. “A/RES/75/192.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/votes/resolution/A-RES-75-192/. Accessed .