United Nations Security Council Resolution 2166
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← 2165 | Lists of resolutions | 2167 → |
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- Background
- Novorossiya
- Dissolution of the Soviet Union
- Russia–Ukraine relations
- Budapest Memorandum
- 2003 Tuzla Island conflict
- Orange Revolution
- 2007 Munich speech of Vladimir Putin
- Russia–Ukraine gas disputes
- Euromaidan
- Revolution of Dignity
- Annexation
- Timeline
- Little green men
- Krymnash
- Major topics
- 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism
- Information war
- Belarusian involvement
- International sanctions
- Media portrayal
- Foreign aid (military
- humanitarian)
- Timeline
- Capture of Donetsk
- Sloviansk
- Kramatorsk
- Artemivsk
- Mariupol
- Sievierodonetsk
- Il-76 shootdown
- Zelenopillia rocket attack
- Karlivka
- 1st Donetsk Airport
- Luhansk Border Base
- Krasnyi Lyman
- Sector D clashes
- Great Raid of 2014
- Shakhtarsk Raion
- Horlivka
- Yasynuvata
- Ilovaisk
- Novoazovsk
- 2nd Mariupol
- 2nd Donetsk Airport
- Debaltseve
- International recognition
Post-Minsk II conflict
- 2015
- Shyrokyne (2015)
- Marinka (2015)
- 2016
- Svitlodarsk (2016)
- 2017
- Avdiivka (2017)
- 2018
- Kerch Strait incident (2018)
- 2019
- 2020
- 2021
- 2022
Attacks on civilians
- Sloviansk
- Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
- Novosvitlivka
- Volnovakha
- Donetsk
- Mariupol
- Kramatorsk
- Stanytsia Luhanska
- Assassination attempts on Volodymyr Zelenskyy
- Northern Ukraine campaign
- Eastern Ukraine campaign
- Avdiivka
- Mariupol
- Kharkiv
- Izium
- Battle of Donbas
- Sievierodonetsk
- Lysychansk
- Bakhmut
- Kharkiv counteroffensive
- Vuhledar
- Southern Ukraine campaign
- 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive
- Effects and aftermath
Related
United Nations Security Council Resolution 2166, concerning the shootdown of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, was sponsored by Australia[1] and adopted unanimously on 21 July 2014. The resolution expressed support for the "efforts to establish a full, thorough and independent international investigation into the incident in accordance with international civil aviation guidelines" and called on all United Nations member states "to provide any requested assistance to civil and criminal investigations".[2]
Preparation
The resolution was drafted on 18 July, put into circulation on 19 July and agreed the next day.[1] Russia, a permanent member with a veto right, supported the resolution after negotiations led to some text changes, including terming the incident as "downing" of the aircraft instead of "shooting down".[3]
See also
- United Nations Security Council Resolution 731
- United Nations Security Council Resolution 748
- List of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 2101 to 2200 (2013–2015)
References
- ^ a b "MH17: Inside the process behind the UN Security Council vote on Australian-sponsored resolution". ABC Online. 22 July 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
- ^ "Resolution 2166 (2014)". United Nations. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
- ^ "MH17: UNSC unanimously adopts resolution for intl probe". First Post. 22 July 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
External links
- Text of the Resolution at undocs.org