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Liu Zhenmin, China's deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, delivers a speech at a plenary session of the UN General Assembly in New York on July 24, 2009. Liu stated on Friday that the implementation of the concept of "responsibility to protect" should not contravene the principle of state sovereignty and the principle of noninterference of internal affairs.(Xinhua/Shen Hong) Photo Gallery>>> |
UNITED NATIONS, July 24 (Xinhua) -- The
implementation of the concept of "responsibility to protect" should not
contravene the principle of state sovereignty and the principle of
noninterference of internal affairs, a senior Chinese diplomat said Friday.
Liu Zhenmin, China's deputy permanent representative
to the United Nations, made the remarks as he addressed a plenary session of the
UN General Assembly.
The 2005 world summit outcome document gave a very
prudent description to the concept of "responsibility to protect," he said.
The document strictly limited the scope of its
application to four serious international crimes, namely genocide, war crimes,
ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity, Liu noted. "However, experience in
the past few years shows that there is still controversy over the meaning and
implementation of the concept."
Liu stressed that the government of a given state has
the primary responsibility to protect its own citizens.
"The international community can provide assistance
but the protection of its citizens ultimately depends on the government of the
state," he said. "This is in keeping with the principle of state sovereignty."
"Although the world has undergone profound and
complex changes, the basic status of the purposes and principles of the UN
Charter remains unchanged," he stressed.
"There must not be any wavering of the principles of
respecting state sovereignty and non-interference of internal affairs," he
added.