Bangladesh abstains on Crimea

Bangladesh has abstained from voting in the UN General Assembly against the recent Crimean referendum backed by Moscow.

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The UN voting, intended to declare the referendum results invaiid, was held on Thursday. However, Bangladesh’s foreign ministry had not announced its position right away.

The abstention came to light on Sunday, when the Russian ambassador in Dhaka, Alexander Nikolaev, at a seminar “thanked” Bangladesh its stance.

He said he was “thankful and grateful” to Bangladesh for abstaining from voting.

There were 100 votes in favour of the resolution, 11 against, and 58 abstentions in the 193-nation assembly.

Two dozen countries did not take part either because they did not show up or because they have not paid their dues, Reuters reported earlier.

Although the resolution is non-binding, Western diplomats said it sent a strong message about Russia’s lack of broad support on the Crimean issue.

A Bangladesh foreign ministry official, however, later confirmed the country’s abstention.

He told bdnews24.com that Bangladesh was keenly observing the situation.
“Bangladesh’s foreign policy is guided by the principle of friendship with to all, malice towards none,” he maintained.

The Russian ambassador said the Mar 16 Crimean referendum had fully conformed to democratic procedures and international norms.

More than 82 percent of the electorate had taken part in it.

Over 96 percent of those who voted favoured Crimea’s “reunion” with Russia.

“These numbers speak for themselves,” he said.

He said he strongly protested the use of the term “annexation”. “Its reunification,” he stressed.

Replying to a question, he said Russia was not flexing its muscle but “concentrating on its own interest”.

He said Russia supported a “multi-polar” world, and its engagement with Bangladesh was “comprehensive”.

Source: bdnews24