UNITED NATIONS (AP) â" Ukraines fugitive  president requested Russian soldiers in the  strategic Crimea region "to establish legitimacy,  peace, law and order," Russias U.N. ambassador  said Monday, contradicting the presidents own  comments last week, while Ukraines ambassador said  16,000 troops are now deployed there.
  
  The disclosure of ousted President Viktor  Yanukovychs support for Russian military  intervention was made at the third emergency  meeting of the U.N. Security Council since Friday.  It came amid fears that the Kremlin might carry  out more land grabs in pro-Russian eastern  Ukraine.
  
  Russia faced demands from  almost all council members to pull its troops out  of Crimea and got no support for its military  action from close ally China.
  
  "With  the exception of one member of the Security  Council â" the Russian Federation â" we have  heard overwhelming support for the territorial  integrity of Ukraine, and for peaceful dialogue,"  U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power said.
  
   Action by the U.N.s most powerful body appears  unlikely, though Britains U.N. Ambassador Mark  Lyall Grant said, "We certainly do not rule out  presenting resolutions in the Security Council in  the next few days." Russia has veto power as a  permanent member and can block the council from  adopting any resolution criticizing or sanctioning  Moscow.
  
  During the heated meeting,  Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin strongly  defended his governments actions as "fully  appropriate and legitimate" to defend the human  rights of the Russian-speaking minority in  Ukraine, which he claimed is under threat of  oppression from the north and west after violent  protests swept in a new government.
  
   He told the council he was authorized to read a  statement from Yanukovych â" and offered to show  council members a copy â" requesting Russian  President Vladimir Putin to use his armed forces  to restore peace and defend the people of  Ukraine.
  
  Yanukovych fled the former  Soviet republic to Russia after his ouster and had  said Friday that he would not ask for Russian  forces.
  
  Churkin quoted Yanukovych  as saying "Ukraine is on the brink of civil war,"  people particularly in the Russian-speaking Crimea  are being persecuted for language and political  reasons and "there are open acts of terror and  violence" under the influence of Western  countries.
  
  French Ambassador Gerard  Araud said the letter was just a piece of paper  handed to Yanukovych which "got his signature."  Asked if the letter was phony, Araud replied, "Its  not a false letter, its a false president."
   
  Power, the U.S. envoy, dismissed Moscows  contention that it intervened militarily in Crimea  to protect the human rights of Russian civilians  there as "baseless," insisting there is no  evidence of any threats against ethnic Russians in  Ukraine.
  
  "One might think that  Moscow has just become the rapid response arm of  the High Commissioner for Human Rights," she told  the council.
  
  Ukraines U.N.  Ambassador Yuriy Sergeyev again pleaded for help  and sent a letter to all 193 U.N. member states  detailing Russias takeover of crucial government  and military facilities.
  
  The letter  described what could be the first reported  casualty of the crisis. Sergeyev claimed that  Russian forces trying to capture the armory of the  Ukrainian Air Tactical brigade near Sevastopol  used stun grenades against Ukrainian soldiers  Sunday, leaving an officer with a brain injury and  in shock.
  
  The letter also said  Russian aircraft illegally entered Ukrainian  airspace twice Monday night. It said all main  roads in Crimea are blocked, military bases and  Ukrainian ships in Sevastopol Bay are surrounded  and an attempt has been made to capture the  Ukrainian Navy Headquarters.
  
  Power  said the Organization for Security and Cooperation  in Europe â" which includes Russia, the U.S., and  all European countries â" was deploying monitors  to Ukraine on Monday night. She urged Russia to  allow the monitors to go to Crimea, an appeal  echoed by many other council members.
  
  Churkin didnt rule that out but said it must  be considered by the government in Crimea.
   
  The Russian ambassador claimed the recent  protests were hijacked by extremists and gangs of  "ultranationalists," and he said Ukraine should  return to an agreement signed Feb. 21 by  Yanukovych â" but not Moscow â" to hold early  elections and surrender some powers. Yanukovych  fled after sealing the pact with the opposition  and foreign ministers of France, Germany and  Poland.
  
  Every Security Council  speaker but Russia urged a peaceful solution to  the worst crisis in Europe in the 21st century.  Even Chinas Ambassador Liu Jieyi didnt endorse  Russias military action, saying: "China  consistently stands for the principles of  non-interference in the internal affairs of a  country, and for respect for Ukraines  independence, sovereignty and territorial  integrity."
  
  The meeting featured  several rounds of testy exchanges.
  
   "This meeting was unfortunately totally useless,"  Frances Araud said afterward. "We were hoping that  the ambassador of the Russian Federation would  tell us that the Russian Federation is agreeing to  mediation, but they did not. They said that the  government of Kiev has no legitimacy."
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Russia says Yanukovych requested troops in Crimea
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