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Slovak government Chief of Staff Juraj Gedra has said Bratislava’s support for a resolution condemning Russia was a misunderstanding
Slovak government Chief of Staff Juraj Gedra has apologized after Bratislava voted in favor of a resolution in the UN General Assembly that condemns Russia, saying it was a misunderstanding.
The UN body adopted two competing resolutions on the Ukraine conflict on Monday, the third anniversary of the escalation in early 2022. Slovakia voted in favor of the version initiated by Kiev and its EU backers, which condemned Russia, calling its “aggression” a violation of the UN Charter and demanding the withdrawal of Russian forces. The other resolution was US-backed and called for a “swift end” to the conflict.
“It was a failure on our part,” Gedra said on Thursday in an interview with InfoVojna radio.
“We want to apologize for the outcome and for the misunderstanding which arose,” he added. According to Gedra, the government instructed Slovakia’s UN representatives to vote in favor of the neutrally-worded US resolution, but a miscommunication occurred.
Slovakia’s vote was criticized by the Slovak National Party (SNS), which earlier this week called on Prime Minister Robert Fico to officially apologize to Russia and launch an internal probe to determine the reason for the apparent mistake. Under Fico’s leadership, Slovakia, a member of both NATO and the EU, has frequently dissented from EU policies on Ukraine, halted military support for Kiev, and recently offered to host peace negotiations between Moscow and Kiev.
The SNS also demanded that Slovak Minister of Foreign and European Affairs Juraj Blanar reconsider Slovakia’s representation in the UN following Monday’s assembly. Blanar, however, defended his country’s vote, claiming that the Ukraine-submitted text was a “possible compromise.”
Serbia, which also voted in favor of the Ukraine-endorsed resolution at the UN, apologized for the move earlier this week, with President Aleksandar Vucic saying it was done “by mistake.”
READ MORE: Kremlin comments on Serbia’s UN ‘mistake’
The UN Security Council eventually passed the US-drafted resolution, with backing from Moscow and Washington, and five abstentions from European members. Russian Ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia welcomed the resolution as a starting point for future efforts toward a peaceful settlement.
“The text we passed is not an ideal one, but in essence, it is a first attempt to have a constructive and future-oriented product by the Council which is talking about the path to peace, rather than blowing the conflict up,” he said.
US Deputy Ambassador Dorothy Shea also said the resolution is “a first step” towards peace in Ukraine, and slammed previous UN resolutions focused on condemning Russia for “failing to stop the war.”