Ukraine’s first lady called Wednesday for justice for her country, as the UN General Assembly prepared to meet to weigh a resolution calling for a "just and lasting peace" that Kyiv hopes will show the global community in its support.
"I think you will agree is that regardless of our country or nationality, we have the right not to be killed in our own homes," Zelenska told a special meeting at the United Nations, two days before the first anniversary of Russia's invasion.
"However, Ukrainians are being killed in front of the whole world for the whole year in their own cities, villages, apartments, hospitals, theaters," she told a panel of UN diplomats by video.
"That's why we call on the United Nations to establish a special tribunal for the crimes of Russian aggression," she said.
The UN General Assembly meets Wednesday afternoon in New York to debate a draft resolution, sponsored by some 60 countries, calling for a just peace in Ukraine.
The text stresses "the need to reach, as soon as possible, a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine in line with the principles of the Charter of the United Nations."
Like previous resolutions, it reaffirms the UN's "commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine" and calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities.
The text, which unlike a Security Council resolution would not create a binding law, demands Russia "immediately, completely and unconditionally withdraw all of its military forces from the territory of Ukraine."
A vote at the close of debate is not expected until at least Thursday.
Kyiv hopes to garner the support of at least as many nations as in October, when 143 countries voted for a resolution condemning the annexation of several Ukrainian territories by Russia.
To that end, Ukraine stopped pushing for the inclusion in the resolution of President Volodymyr Zelensky's 10-point peace plan, according to diplomatic sources.
"I think we have come up with a text which really tries to gather the international community, tries to be as cohesive and as positive as possible," said one European diplomat.
A year after the invasion of Ukraine, it will also be a message to Russia that "it cannot achieve its objectives through force," the diplomat added, hoping that if Moscow "feels isolated, at a certain point the pressure will be too strong to be resisted."
- 'Symbolic' -
The days-long debate on the resolution, which will feature a host of ministers visiting New York, including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, is set to begin Wednesday at 3:00 pm local time (2000 GMT).
On Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to "systematically" continue his offensive in Ukraine, in an anti-Western speech reminiscent of the Cold War.
As some countries in the global South express weariness that the North is overly focused on the conflict, US ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield argued that supporting peace in Ukraine "is not somehow about choosing between the United States and Russia," but "defending the charter" of the UN.
China is also growing worried that the conflict may spiral out of control, and has indicated that it wants to present a proposal soon to find a "political solution" to the war.
China and others, notably India, have abstained during the series of UN votes on Ukraine.
"If Kyiv won't talk about peace, there is a risk that the BRICS countries will start to say Ukraine is the real obstacle to peace," said International Crisis Group analyst Richard Gowan, referring to Brazil, India, China and South Africa.
"That is why the US and EU were keen to get references to a cessation of hostilities in this week's text," he told AFP.
That "cessation of hostiles" is accompanied by a stipulation that Russia withdraw its troops, since a simple ceasefire could be just a lull allowing Russia to regroup, diplomats noted.
If the resolution is mainly "symbolic," Gowan said, it will have the merit of underlining Russia's isolation, and "undermines Putin's pretensions to be leading some grand anti-Western coalition."
The General Assembly has voted on three resolutions voicing opposition to the Russian invasion over the past year, with each receiving between 140 and 143 votes in favor.
Five countries -- Russia, Belarus, Syria, North Korea and Eritrea -- have systematically opposed them, while fewer than 40 others abstained.
A fourth resolution in April sought to suspend Russia from the UN Human Rights Council, and while successful, it received less support.
Only 93 votes were in favor, 24 against and 58 abstentions.
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© Agence France-Presse
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