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West again derails UN Security Council meeting on NATO’s aggression against Yugoslavia

When the event’s agenda was put to a vote, six countries voted in favor and nine abstained.

UNITED NATIONS, March 28. /TASS/. For the second time this week, the UN Security Council was unable to hold a meeting devoted to NATO’s 1999 aggression against Yugoslavia due to the West’s resistance, a TASS correspondent reported.

When the event’s agenda was put to a vote, six countries voted in favor and nine abstained. Therefore, the document failed to receive the required support. The vote was held on France’s request.

Similar events unfolded on March 25, when Western delegations took advantage of the rules of procedure to derail a meeting on the 25th anniversary of the 1999 NATO bombings of Yugoslavia. Despite earlier informal agreements, French Permanent Representative to the UN Nicolas de Riviere demanded the event’s agenda be put to a vote. No delegations voted against the document, but it was turned down after failing to garner the nine necessary votes to pass.

The Russian mission responded by saying that the requirement of approving the agenda of every meeting through a procedural vote shall be applied to future Security Council sessions as well, as long as member countries continue to fail to stick to their "normal modus operandi.".