"I don't know if it's treatable": Ukraine's UN representative Kyslytsia responds to accusations of the Russian delegation of speaking in Russian

"I don't know if it's treatable": Ukraine's UN representative Kyslytsia responds to accusations of the Russian delegation of speaking in Russian

Kyiv  •  UNN

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In response to Russian criticism of the non-proliferation of the Russian language, Ukraine's UN representative, Sergiy Kyslytsya, referred to Almodovar's film. In a new resolution, the UN condemned human rights violations.

Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the UN Sergiy Kyslytsya responded to the Russian delegation's accusations of speaking in a non-Russian language before the UN General Assembly voted on a resolution condemning Russia's serious human rights violations in the TOT of Ukraine. This is reported by UNN with reference to Kyslytsya's post on the social network X.

"Es que no estoy curada..." (I am not cured), says Lucía, the heroine of the film Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown by the prominent Spaniard Pedro Almodóvar. "That's how close to a breakdown Moscow's envoy was today at the UN General Assembly after I spoke in Spanish before the vote on the draft Crimean resolution. They said that the representative of Ukraine was ready to speak in any language other than Russian to "avoid repression by his government." I don't know if this is treatable, you can judge for yourself

 ," Kyslytsya wrote.

AddendumAddendum

The UN General Assembly has adopted an updated resolutioncondemning Russia's serious human rights violations in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. 

The updated resolution, among other things, demands that Russia cease forced deportations and ensure the safe return of all Ukrainian children and civilian hostages. These are some of the most heinous crimes and must be stopped.