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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN alarmed by Russia's 'mass' passports move in Ukraine

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GENEVA: The United Nations on Monday voiced deep concern over Moscow's "mass conferral" of Russian passports in Ukrainian territory it controls and denying essential services to people who refuse them.


The UN human rights office, OHCHR, said residents who do not take up Russian citizenship were being denied access to essential public services and were at greater risk of arbitrary detention.


"One and a half years after the Russian Federation's full-scale armed attack on Ukraine, we continue to bear witness to blatant and unabated violations of human rights," said UN deputy human rights chief Nada Al-Nashif.


In Russian-controlled territory, "we have observed with deep concern a policy of mass conferral of Russian citizenship on residents", she told the Human Rights Council in a debate on OHCHR's latest report on rights in Ukraine.


"Individuals who opt not to accept Russian passports find themselves ensnared in a web of exclusion, denied access to essential public services such as social security and healthcare," she said.


Russia had for years been issuing passports to Ukrainians in the eastern Donbas areas held by pro-Moscow separatists as well as in annexed Crimea.


An array of routine necessities, such as receiving government benefits, getting or keeping a job and seeking medical treatment require Russian-issued papers.


Putin signed a decree in April that allows Ukrainians in occupied areas to potentially be deported if they do not get a Russian passport by July 1, 2024.


The UN deputy high commissioner for human rights said the conflict in Ukraine "continues to erode the foundations of dignity and humanity".


Nashif said "torture remains a brutal reality" for civilians and prisoners of war held by Russia.


"Countless detainees were also forced to praise the Russian Federation, learn and sing Russian songs and suffered severe beatings for failing, or speaking Ukrainian," said Nashif.


Moscow has made no discernible effort to ensure accountability for violations committed by their own forces -- and indeed a new law "effectively grants amnesty to Russian servicepersons for an overly broad range of crimes", she said.


Moscow's representative Yaroslav Eremin told the Human Rights Council that OHCHR was "continuing to whitewash Kyiv and shifting the blame for the crimes of the Ukrainian authorities on our country".


"We fundamentally disagree with the methodology, content and the conclusions" of OHCHR's report, he said. — AFP


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