Russia's foreign minister has complained in a speech to the UN General Assembly about countries using sanctions to meddle in the domestic affairs of other nations.
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Sergei Lavrov said such penalties hampered an effective worldwide response to issues such as the coronavirus pandemic, climate change, military conflicts and international terrorism.
He said the attempts by some countries to "meddle in the domestic affairs of other states, using unilateral sanctions" interfere with addressing "challenging threats the world is facing today."
"We believe that this is largely attributed to the fact that some countries are not willing to account for the legitimate interests of other states," Lavrov said in a speech on behalf of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, which consists of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
"They are seeking to impose concepts and standards like the 'rules-based world order' while attempting to meddle in the domestic affairs of other states, using unilateral sanctions in violation of the UN Security Council prerogatives, and exhibiting intolerance and hatred," the minister charged.
Lavrov's speech came amid tensions between Russia and the West over Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, who is being treated in Berlin for what German authorities said was a nerve agent poisoning, and as the European Union ponders imposing sanctions over Belarus' disputed presidential election and crackdowns on protesters.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel called Navalny's poisoning an attempted murder that was intended to silence Russian President Vladimir Putin's most prominent foe. Merkel's office indicated that she may be willing to rethink the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project, which would bring Russian gas to Germany under the Baltic Sea.
Russia also drew international criticism for approving a COVID-19 vaccine after testing it on just several dozen people.
Putin, who is scheduled to address the UN General Assembly later on Tuesday, touted the vaccine on national television and said that one of his adult daughters had already been inoculated.
But Russian and Western experts insisted that further studies were necessary to determine its effectiveness and safety.
Australian Associated Press