NewsBelarus at UN: Sanctions are economic terrorism and aggression

Belarus at UN: Sanctions are economic terrorism and aggression

Alaksandr Łukaszenka
Alaksandr Łukaszenka
Images source: © PAP | PAVEL BEDNYAKOV / SPUTNIK / GOVERNMENT PRESS SERVICE POOL

6:49 AM EDT, June 14, 2024

Belarus demands that unilateral sanctions be recognized not only as economic terrorism but as an act of aggression, argued the country's permanent representative, Valentin Rybakov, at the United Nations General Assembly session. For example, he pointed to the halt in the supply of medicines, including those from Poland.

At the United Nations General Assembly session, Belarus filed a motion to recognize sanctions as an act of terrorism. The country’s permanent representative to the UN, Valentin Rybakov, argued that these sanctions include restrictions on medicines, reports Kommersant.

Medicines from Poland

The representative of Belarus at the international forum complained that due to the United States and the European Union's sanction policies on Belarus, the supply of many medicines has been halted.

"In particular, we are talking about medicines for epilepsy treatment supplied from Poland, medicines for treating Parkinson's disease and certain types of cancer from Finland, and basic painkillers from the United Kingdom," he enumerated.

Sanctions like war and hunger

Rybakov added that a direct consequence of sanctions on Belarusian potassium fertilizers, which allegedly make up almost one-third of the world's exports, "is a significant drop in crop yields in Africa," writes Kommersant.

In this regard, the Belarusian authorities have concluded that "unilateral sanctions in their effect are comparable to severe armed conflicts and natural disasters."