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'Bloody way to future': 203 Nobel laureates slam Russia over Ukraine invasion

'Bloody way to future': 203 Nobel laureates slam Russia over Ukraine invasion

India Today
Friday, March 18, 2022 03:33:14 AM UTC

Russia-Ukraine war news updates: As many as 203 Nobel laureates in an open letter called the Russian invasion a "blatant violation of the United Nations Charter".

As the Russia-Ukraine war rages on for the third week, a letter signed by 203 Nobel Prize laureates showing solidarity with Ukraine was released. In the letter, the Nobel prize winners expressed support for the Ukrainian people and condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine.

They called the Russian invasion a blatant violation of the United Nations Charter and urged Russia to resolve disputes in a peaceful way.

The undersigned Nobel laureates voice our support for the Ukrainian people and the free and independent state of Ukraine as it faces Russian aggression.

In a move that recalls the infamous attack of Nazi Germany on Poland in 1939 (using similar tricks of feigned provocation) and on the Soviet Union in 1941, the government of the Russian Federation, led by President Putin, has launched an unprovoked military aggression — nothing else but a war — against its neighbor, Ukraine. We choose our words carefully here, for we do not believe the Russian people have a role in this aggression.

We join in condemning these military actions and President Putin’s essential denial of the legitimacy of Ukraine’s existence. There is always a peaceful way to resolve disputes. The Russian invasion blatantly violates the United Nations Charter, which says “All members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.” It ignores the Budapest Memorandum of 1994, which obligated Russia and others to respect the sovereignty, independence, and existing borders of Ukraine.

READ: They shall not be forgiven: Ukrainian MP grieves death of journalist girlfriend in Russian shelling

Russia’s security concerns can be addressed within the framework of the UN Charter, the 1975 Helsinki Final Act, and the 1990 Paris Charter. To make war, as President Putin and his collaborators have done, is an unwarranted, bloody, and unproductive way to a future. The Russian invasion will stain the international reputation of the Russian state for decades to come. It will pose barriers to its economy and inflict hardships on its population. The sanctions imposed will restrict the ease of movement of its talented and hardworking people in the world. Why raise this fence between Russia and the world now?

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