Russia’s UN envoy: Moscow ‘not blocking’ UN access to Syria, Western ‘propaganda storm’ misleading

Russia’s envoy to the UN has refuted US accusations that Moscow is blocking UN access to Syria “to investigate any and all credible allegations,” claiming the charge is “misleading.” He also urged Western partners to refrain from a “propaganda storm.”
  Speaking from the UN headquarters in New York, Russian Ambassador
  Vitaly Churkin told reporters that Russia had done everything
  within its power to facilitate a Syrian government request that
  the UN investigate the deployment of chemical weapons in a
  government-controlled suburb of Aleppo on March 19.
  
“It was not through the fault of ours that the Syrian
  government was presented with formulas for that investigation –
  Iraq time formulas – which of course were impossible to
  accept,” Churkin stated.
  
  The ambassador also stressed Russia’s role in helping arrange an
  invitation for members of the UN chemical arms team to visit
  Damascus.
  
  On Wednesday, the head of the UN investigation team to probe the
  alleged use of Chemical Weapons in Syria, Ake Sellstromand, and
  UN disarmament chief Angela Kane accepted an invitation from the
  Syrian government to discuss the investigation of alleged
  chemical attacks in Syria.
  
  Meanwhile, Churkin further refuted the US State Department’s
  claim that Russia was blocking a UN Security Council effort to
  allow UN access into Syria.
  
“It’s not for the Security Council to allow access. It’s for
  the Syrian government to agree on that, with the [United Nations]
  Secretariat. And this is exactly what they’ve been trying to
  achieve, having invited the UN chemical weapons inspectors to
  Syria way back in March.”
  The envoy further stressed the need to only look into
  “credible allegations,” as Western states had been
  attempting to create “the maximum number of allegations with
  minimal credibility in an effort, one might think, to create
  maximum problems for arranging such investigations.”
  He further attempted to silence western diplomatic chatter, which
  claimed that Russia had blocked a draft UN Security Council
  resolution this week to prevent a UN chemical weapons
  investigation team from conducting an “objective” inquiry
  in Syria.
  
  It is “wrong to describe Russia as the sole voice” in the
  discussion on Syria, Churkin went on to say. He added that his
  Chinese colleague, Ambassador Li Baodong, “entirely
  shared” his position.
  
  According to Churkin, this includes the two countries’ belief
  that the language used in the G8 statement on the chemical
  weapons investigation should be made into a resolution.
  
“What we pointed out is that a declaration of the G8 is an
  important political document of course – but it is not
  necessarily meant to be put in the form of a resolution,” he
  said.
  
  It is “clear” from the text of the G8 statement, that
  there should first be an investigation, and then the results of
  the investigation should go to the Security Council for
  assessment, Churkin stressed.
  
  However, some Western nations – the UK in particular – “tried
  to put the cart before the horse once again,” Churkin said,
  adding that such notions were “completely unreasonable and
  contrary to the G8 declaration they were referring to.”
  
  The Russian envoy also noted what he deemed to be a somewhat
  inadequate response by several Western countries following an
  announcement that Russia handed over its thorough investigation
  of the Aleppo incident to the UN.
  
“Even before having a chance to look at this very serious and
  substantive 80-page investigation analysis,” some senior
  Western diplomats made “remarks…repeating this naïve story
  they came up from the outset...that it was the government itself
  who was shooting but missed the target and killed its own
  people,” Churkin said.
  
  After the visit of two senior UN representatives to Damascus, he
  said “it makes no sense, if you’re interested in good results,
  to create this kind of a small propaganda storm in a glass of
  water” and keep on holding onto those “fantastic
  scenarios.”
  The envoy reiterated that the Russian inquiry makes it
  “absolutely clear that both the projectile and the chemical
  [used in March 19 Aleppo incident] were produced in a way, which
  rules out…production by the Syrian government” and
  “conclusively shows” that the chemical weapons were “in
  fact…used by the opposition.”













