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China and Russia veto UN resolution on protecting Hormuz shipping

Oil prices have surged since the US and Israel struck Iran at the end of February

Published Wed, Apr 8, 2026 · 07:20 AM
    • The 15-member Security Council voted 11 in favour of the resolution presented by Bahrain, with two against – China and Russia – and two abstentions.
    • The 15-member Security Council voted 11 in favour of the resolution presented by Bahrain, with two against – China and Russia – and two abstentions. PHOTO: REUTERS

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    [WASHINGTON] China and Russia on Tuesday (Apr 7) vetoed a UN resolution encouraging states to coordinate efforts to protect commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, calling the measure biased against Iran, while Washington’s ambassador to the world body called on “responsible nations” to join the US in securing the waterway.

    The 15-member Security Council voted 11 in favour of the resolution presented by Bahrain, with two against – China and Russia – and two abstentions.

    US President Donald Trump threatened that “a whole civilisation will die tonight” as Iran showed no sign of accepting his ultimatum to open the Strait of Hormuz by Tuesday evening, Washington time.

    Oil prices have surged since the US and Israel struck Iran at the end of February, unleashing a conflict that has run for more than five weeks while Teheran has largely closed the strait that was previously the route for about a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas.

    “The draft resolution has not been adopted, owing to the negative vote of a permanent member of the Council,” Bahrain’s Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani said.

    US ambassador condemns the vetoes

    The US ambassador to the United Nations, Mike Waltz, condemned the Russian and Chinese vetoes, saying they marked “a new low” when Iran’s shutting of the Strait was preventing medical aid and supplies reaching humanitarian crises in the Congo, Sudan and Gaza.

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    “No one should tolerate that. They are holding the global economy at gunpoint. But today, Russia and China did tolerate it. They sided with a regime that seeks to intimidate the Gulf into submission, even as it brutalises its own people.”

    Waltz said that Iran could choose “to reopen the Strait, to seek peace and to make amends”.

    He added: “But until then and afterwards, we call on responsible nations to join us in securing the Strait of Hormuz, protecting it, ensuring that it remains open to lawful commerce, to humanitarian goods, and the free movement of the world’s goods.”

    France deplored the vetoes.

    “The aim was to encourage strictly, purely defensive measures to provide the security and safety for the Strait without spiralling towards escalation,” its UN  ambassador, Jerome Bonnafont, said.

    Russians and Chinese say text was biased

    Russia and China said that the resolution was biased against Iran, and China’s UN envoy Fu Cong said adopting such a draft when the US was threatening the survival of a civilisation would have sent the wrong message.

    Russia’s UN ambassador Vasily Nebenzya said that Russia and China were proposing an alternative resolution on the situation in the Middle East, including maritime security.

    A text of that resolution seen by Reuters urges “de-escalation of the ongoing hostilities” and “a return to the path of diplomacy”.

    Iran’s UN ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani praised the Chinese and Russian moves, saying “their action today prevented the Security Council from being misused to legitimise aggression”.

    Iravani added that the UN secretary-general’s personal envoy was en route to Teheran to pursue consultations. A UN source said the envoy, Jean Arnault, who left for the Middle East on Monday, intends to visit Iran as part of his efforts to encourage an end to the war, but his travel plans would depend on security and logistics.

    China and Russia used their vetoes even though Bahrain had significantly weakened its draft after China opposed authorising force.

    The draft submitted to a vote dropped any authorisation of the use of force. An explicit reference to binding enforcement, included in an earlier draft, was also left out.

    Instead, the text strongly encouraged states “to coordinate efforts, defensive in nature, commensurate to the circumstances, to contribute to ensuring the safety and security of navigation across the Strait of Hormuz”.

    It also said such contributions could include “the escort of merchant and commercial vessels”, and endorsed efforts “to deter attempts to close, obstruct or otherwise interfere with international navigation through the Strait of Hormuz”. REUTERS

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