Request for the indication of provisional measures of protection submitted by Ukraine

Document Number
19316
Document Type
Incidental Proceedings
Date of the Document
Document File
Document

REQUEST FOR THE INDICATION OF
PROVISIONAL MEASURES OF PROTECTION
SUBMITTED BY UKRAINE

1. I have the honor to refer to the Application filed with the Court on 13
January 2017, instituting proceedings on behalf of Ukraine against the Russian Federation,
and to submit, in accordance with Article 41 of the Statute of the Court and Articles 73,

74, and 75 of the Rules of the Court, an urgent Request that the Court indicate
provisional measures. In the course of the Russian Federation’s unlawful and ongoing
aggression against Ukraine, the Russian Federation has committed and continues to commit
violations of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism
(“Terrorism Financing Convention”) and the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination (“CERD”). Provisional measures are requested in this
case to protect the lives and basic human rights of the people of Ukraine, who are

endangered by these acts of terrorism financing and racial discrimination committed by the
Russian Federation. The Court should indicate provisional measures to prevent further
aggravation or extension of the disputes between the parties under these treaties .

2. Ukraine’s Application describes a multifaceted attack on the people of Ukraine
for which the Russian Federation is responsible under international law. In eastern Ukraine,
the Russian Federation has supplied heavy weaponry and other critical support to illegal
armed groups, knowing that these groups are engaged in acts of terrorism against civilians.
With this Russian assistance, these groups have perpetrated appalling attacks, including the

shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 with the resulting deaths of 298 civilians ,
the shelling of civilians in Volnovakha, Kramatorsk, and Mariupol, and the bombing of a
peaceful unity rally in Kharkiv. The Russian Federation violates its obligations under the
Terrorism Financing Convention not just by its failure to prevent or investigate the financing
of terrorism but also by its direct sponsorship of terrorism.

3. In Crimea, the Russian Federation has illegally occupied and purported to
annex a part of Ukraine. The Russian Federation has use d its control over the Crimean
peninsula to impose a policy of Russian ethnic dominance, pursuing the cultural erasure of

non-Russian communities through a systemat ic and ongoing campaign of discrimination.
The Russian Federation’s pattern of discriminatory conduct in pursuit of this policy of
cultural erasure violates its obligations under the CERD.

4. Provisional measures are necessary because t he fundamental rights of civilians
in Ukraine remain under constant threat. The Russian Federation’s arms transfers and other
support for illegal armed groups that have carried out terrorist attacks are ongoing; the
Russian Federation’s campaign of cultural erasure in Crimea continues unabated.
Vulnerable civilians, in an unstable environment susceptible to rapid deterioration, are at risk

of suffering from the Russian Federation’s continuing violations of international law. This is
precisely the type of situation in which this Court has said provisional measures should be
indicated to preserve the respective rights of the parties to a dispute. Seeplication of the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discriminatio n
(Georgia v. Russian Federation), Provisional Measures, Order of 15 October 2008,
I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 396, para. 143; Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo
(Dem. Rep. Congo v. Uganda), Provisional Measures, Order of 1 July 2000, I.C.J. Reports

2000, p. 128, para. 43. I. P RIMA F ACIE JURISDICTION OF THE COURT

5. As set forth in the Application, the Court has jurisdiction over the present
case pursuant to its Statute and Rules, Article 24(1) of the Terrorism Financing
Convention, and Article 22 of the CERD. The Russian Federation has consented under
both Conventions to the Court’s jurisdiction.

II. FACTS SUPPORTING THE R EQUEST

6. This case concerns violations of the Russian Federation’s treaty obligations in
the course of the Russian Federation’s ongoing aggression against Ukraine. Ukraine’s
Application describes in detail the disputes between the parties under the Terrorism
Financing Convention and the CERD.

A. Financing of Terrorism in Ukraine

7. The Russian Federation has instigated and sustained an armed insurrectio n

against the authority of the Ukrainian state, including by systematically supplying illegal
armed groups, such as the “Donetsk People’s Republic” (“DPR”) , the “Luhansk People’s
Republic” (“LPR”), the “Partisans of the Kharkiv People’s Republic” (“Kharkiv Partisans”),
and associated groups and individuals, with heavy weaponry, money, personnel, training,
and other support. These Russian proxies operate with no regard for civilian life, often
murdering and torturing civilians. The Russian Federation knew that these illegal groups

were not only engaged in combat against the Ukrainian authorities, but were routinely
perpetrating acts of terrorism against Ukrainian civilians. Knowing that these groups
engaged in acts of terrorism , the Russian Federation nevertheless decided to sponsor their
activities, providing cash, critical weapons, and other support. With that assistance,
Russian-backed illegal armed groups in Ukraine have committed a series of terrorist attacks,

including:

a. The shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17, murdering 298 civilians
of numerous nationalities, including infants;

b. The attack on a passenger bus on a well -traveled highway near Volnovakha,
murdering twelve civilians;

c. The assault on a densely -populated residential area in Mariupol, murdering
thirty civilians;

d. The bombardment of a residential area in Kramatorsk, killing seven civilians;
and

e. A string of successful and foiled bomb attacks in Ukrainian cities, far from any

zone of conflict, including a deadly bombing of a peaceful rally held in Kharkiv
to support Ukrainian unity.

8. These acts of terrorism have occurred suddenly and without warning to the at -
risk civilian population. Acts of terrorism and civilian deaths have occurred rapidly after
instances of Russian financing and support. It was only a matter of hours after the Russian
Federation transferred a powerful anti -aircraft weapon to eastern Ukraine that the weapon

was used to shoot a civilian airliner from the sky. When Russian- backed illegal armed
2groups took the offensive in the winter of 2015, civilians in Volnovakha, Mariupol, and
Kramatorsk were attacked in rapid succession. Present conditions raise serious concerns
over a repeat of such attacks, if not worse.

9. The situation in eastern Uk raine remains unstable and subject to rapid change.

The conflict in the region has been ongoing for almost three years without resolution , and
there have been numerous acts of terrorism against civilians throughout this period. Despite
the record of terrorist attacks perpetrated by Russian proxies, the Russian Federation
continues to send these groups supplies from across the border. As the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights reported in August 2016, the Russian Federation continues
1
to supply “ ammunition, weaponry and fighters ” to its proxies in eastern Ukraine.
Moreover, there are troubling signs of escalation, as the Russian Federation has increased its
military presence near Ukraine and has engaged in bellicose rhetoric. Further, highlighting
the pressure civilians are under, Russian -backed armed groups have recently expelled an
international aid group from the territory they control. 3

10. In these circumstances, absent provisional measures, the civilian population
remains hostage and v ulnerable to a campaign of terrorist violence that can be escalated at
any moment. There is significant risk that the continuing influx of Russian weapons and
other support will be used to perpetrate acts of terrorism against civilians, as they have in the
past.

B. Cultural Erasure Through Discrimination in Crimea

11. In the Crimean peninsula, the Russian Federation has employed a different set
of tactics, but has shown the same contempt for the fundamental human rights of the people
of Ukraine . The Russian Federation is pursuing its goal of imposing ethnic Russian
dominance on the peninsula with a campaign of cultural erasure through discrimination. As

an initial step, i n March 2014, the Russian Federation held an illegal referendum amid an
intense climate of intimidation. As collective punishment against the non- Russian
communities that refused to accept the illegal occupation and purported annexation, the
Russian Federation proceeded to mount a broad-based campaign of cultural erasure. Against
the Crimean Tatar community, the Russian Federation has suppressed its political leaders

and i nstitutions, prevented important cultural gatherings, perpetrated a regime of
disappearances and murders, conducted a campaign of arbitrary searches and detentions ,
silenced media voices, and suppressed educational rights. Against the ethnic Ukrainian
community, the Russian Federation has also attacked educational rights, prevented important

cultural gatherings, and harassed and intimidated the media.

12. This pattern of discrimination is brutal and ongoing. For example, i n April
2016, the Russian Federation ’s escalating pressure on the Tatar community culminated in
the prohibition of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People, the community’s central political

1
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 May–15 August 2016), para. 3.
2See, e.g., Max Fisher, Signs of Trouble in Ukraine Prompt Question: What’s Vladimir Putin Up , New
York Times (11 August 2016).
3
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, Latest from OSCE Special Monitoring Mission (SMM)
to Ukraine, Based on Information Received as of 19:30, 27 November 2016(28 November 2016).

3 4
and cultural institution. This ban is being enforced; eight members of the Mejlis were fined
for holding an “illegal meeting” in September 2016, and Mejlis members have been unable
to organize the community’s annual commemoration of the victims of the Soviet deportation
5
of Crimean Tatars. Tatar leaders continue to be arrested for “crimes” such as declaring that
Crimea is part of Ukraine, and one prominent leader was involuntarily confined in a
psychiatric hospital in September 2016. 6 Disappearances continue as well, for example in

the case of E7vin Ibragimov, whose May 2016 abduction Russian authorities have failed to
investigate.

13. This pattern of political and cultural suppression over almost three years has
undermined the leadership of the Crimean Tatar community and left its population

particularly vulnerable to additional acts of Russian discrimination and violence. With its
representative organization now banned and its leaders either in exile or subject to
psychiatric detention, arrest, search es, or other harassment at any time, the Crimean Tatar

community is under great pressure, suffering the ongoing effects of discrimination, and at
risk of further actions leading toward the erasure of its distinct culture in Crimea. The
dramatic decrease in the T atar population on the Crimean pe ninsula – from 243,400 in the

last Ukrainian census to just 42,254 since the occupation – demonstrates the imminent and
continuing danger to the Crimean Tatar people and their culture. 8

14. Ethnic Ukrainians likewise remain extremely vulnerable. The Russian

Federation has proven especially effective in suppressing ethnic Ukrainians’ education and
ability to maintain their language and culture. Over the past two years, Ukrainian -language
education in Crimea has been all but eliminated , with the number of students receiving such
9
education falling from more than 12,000 before the occupation to less than 1,000. Of the

4Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 February–15 May 2016), para. 186; Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in Ukraine (16 May–15 August 2016), para. 164.

5Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 August–15 November 2016), para. 168.

6Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 May–15 August 2016) , para. 178; Human Rights Watch, Crimean Tatar Activist Confined in
Psychiatric Hospital (26 August 2016); Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights,
Report on the Human R ights Situation in Ukraine (16 August–15 November 2016) , para. 159; Radio Free

Europe/Radio Liberty, Punitive Medicine? Crimean Tatars Shaken By Leader’s Confinement to Mental Asylum
(24 August 2016); Amnesty International, Help Drop Charges Against Activist Released From Forced
Psychiatric Detention (Ukraine: UA 205/16) (9 September 2016).
7
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 May–15 August 2016 ), para. 154; Amnesty International, URGENT ACTION: Crimean Tatar
Activist Forcibly Disappeared (26 May 2016).
8
State Statistics Committee of Ukraine, About Number and Composition Population of Autonomous Republic
of Crimea by Data All-Ukrainian Population Census,
http://2001.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/general/nationality/Crimea; Russia Census in the Republic of Crimea;
Russia Census in the Republic of Crimea, National Composition of the Population (18 August 2015),
http://crimea.gks.ru/wps/wcm/connect/rosstat_ts/crimea/ru/census_and_re…
4/score_2010/.
9
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation in
Ukraine (16 August–15 November 2015), para. 157.

4seven Ukrainian-language educational institutions that existed in Crimea until 2014, only
one remains in operation in the 2016–17 school yea r – and even this school has ceased
Ukrainian-language instruction in the first and second grades . Provisional measures are

required to prevent this cultural erasure from deepening while this case proceeds.

III.THE R IGHTS U KRAINE SEEKS TO P ROTECT

15. In accordance with Article 41 of the Statute of the Court, the object of
provisional measures is to preserve the respective rights of the parties pending the decision
of the Court. See e.g., Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of

the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Yugoslavia), Provisional Measures, Order of 8 April
1993, I.C.J. Reports 1993, p. 19 ,para. 34. The Court at this stage does not make
“definitive findings.” Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (Dem. Rep. Congo v.
Uganda), Provisional Measures, Order of 1 July 2000, I.C.J. Reports 2000, p. 127, para. 41;

see also Certain Activities Carried Out by Nicaragua in the Border Area (Costa Rica v.
Nicaragua), Provisional Measures, Order of 8 March 2011, I.C.J. Reports 2011,
Declaration of Judge Greenwood, p. 46, para. 2. Provided that the Court concludes that the
rights claimed are “plausible,” provisional measures may be indicated. See Immunities and

Criminal Proceedings (Equatorial Guinea v. France), Provisional Measures , Order of 7
December 2016, para. 78. Ukraine’s claims far exceed this modest standard.

16. Ukraine seeks to protect its rights , and those of its people, under the Terrorism
Financing Convention. As explained in the Application, 11 Article 18 of the Terrorism
Financing Convention requires the Russian Federation to “cooperate in the prevention” of

terrorism financing. Far from “cooperating,” t he Russian Federation has instead repeatedly
violated its obligations under this Convention by directly financing terrorism in Ukraine, as
well as refusing to halt or investigate the financing of terrorism by public and privat e actors
on its territory. Ukraine requests provisional measures to protect its people from additional

terrorist acts th ey may suffer as a consequence of Russian sponsorship of terrorism in
violation of the Convention.

17. Ukraine further seeks to protect its rights, and those of its people, under the
CERD. As explained in the Application, 12 the Russian Federation’s campaign o f cultural
erasure through discrimination violates Articles 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 of the CERD. Ukraine

requests provisional measures to protect its people from the irreparable harm caused by this
ongoing discriminatory campaign of cultural erasure.

IV.T HE R EASON FOR URGENCY

18. The Court has found it appropriate to indicate provisional measures in
circumstances that are “unstable and could rapidly change ,” and when there is “ongoing

tension” without any “overall settlement to [an ongoing] conflict.” See Application of
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
(Georgia v. Russian Federation), Provisional Measures, Order of 15 October 2008,

10
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Report on the Human Rights Situation
11 Ukraine (16 August–15 November 2016), para. 180.
Application, paras. 125–30.
12Application, paras. 131–33.

5I.C.J. Re ports 2008, p. 396, para. 143. Similarly, p rovisional measures have been

granted when conflicts and similar “incidents have occurred on various occasions . . .
leading to fatalities, injuries and the displacement of local inhabitants.” Request for
Interpretation of the Judgment of 15 June 1962 in Temple of Preah Vihear (Cambodia
v. Thailand), Provisional Measures, Order of 18 July 2011, I.C.J. Reports 2011, p. 550,
para. 53. Where past violations have occurred, provisional measures are appropriate so
long as it is “not inconceivable” that they will recur, a standard easily met here.
Immunities and Criminal Proceedings (Equatorial Guinea v. France), Provisional

Measures, Order of 7 December 2016, para. 89. All of these reasons for indicating
provisional measures are heightened when there is a “vulnerable” population in need of
the Court’s protection. Application of the International Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Georgia v. Russian Federation) , Provisional
Measures, Order of 15 October 2008, I.C.J. Reports 2008 , p. 396, para. 143.

19. For the reasons explained above and in the Application, the civilian populations
of Ukraine, including in particular eastern Ukraine and Crimea, are extremely vulnerable and
require the Court’s immediate protection.

20. In eastern Ukraine, the situation is unstable and subject to rapid change. The

Russian Federation continues to arm and otherwise finance its proxies that have engaged in
acts of terrorism in Ukraine, to devastating effect. Absent measures to prevent this
continuing conduct, there is significant risk that the civilian population will face more
terrorist violence.

21. In Crimea, the Russian Federation’s policy of cultural erasure through
discrimination remains similarly ongoing and unrelenting. The Crimean Tatar and ethnic
Ukrainian communities face continuing harassment, abuse, and restrictions. Absent
measures to prevent this continuing conduct, these vulnerable groups will face further acts of

discrimination and a significant risk that the Russian policy of erasing their distinct cultural
identities will succeed.

V. T HE M EASURES R EQUESTED

22. On the basis of the facts set forth above, and in order to prevent irreparable
prejudice to the rights of Ukraine and its citizens and to avoid aggravating or extending the
disputes between the parties under the Terrorism Financing Convention and the CERD,
Ukraine respectfully requests the Court to indicate provisional measures to protect its rights
and the rights of its people pending the determination of this case on the merits.

23. With respect to the Terrorism Financing Convention, Ukraine requests that

the Court order the following provisional measures:

a. The Russian Federation shall refrain from any action which might
aggravate or extend the dispute under the Terrorism Financing Convention
before the Court or make this dispute more difficult to resolve.

b. The Russian Fede ration shall exercise appropriate control over its border to
prevent further acts of terrorism financing, including the supply of weapons
from the territory of the Russian Federation to the territory of Ukraine.

6 c. The Russian Federation shall halt and prevent all transfers from the territory

of the Russian Federation of money, weapons, vehicles, equipment,
training, or personnel to groups that have engaged in acts of terrorism
against civilians in Ukraine, or that the Russian Federation knows may in
the future engage in acts of terrorism against civilians in Ukraine, including
but not limited to the “Donetsk People’s Republic,” the “Luhansk People’s
Republic,” the “Kharkiv Partisans, ” and associated groups and individuals.

d. The Russian Federation shal l take all measures at its disposal to ensure that
any groups operating in Ukraine that have previously received transfers

from the territory of the Russian Federation of money, weapons, vehicles,
equipment, training, or personnel will refrain from carrying out acts of
terrorism against civilians in Ukraine.

24. With respect to the CERD, Ukraine requests that the Court order the
following provisional measures :

a. The Russian Federation shall refrain from any action which might
aggravate or extend the dispute under CERD before the Court or make it
more difficult to resolve .

b. The Russian Federation shall refrain from any act of racial discrimination
against persons, groups of persons , or institutions in the territory under its

effective control , including the Cri mean peninsula.

c. The Russian Federation shall cease and desist from acts of political and
cultural suppression against the Crimean Tatar people, including
suspending the decree banning the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People and
refraining from enforcement of this decree and any similar measures, while
this case is pending.

d. The Russian Federation shall take all necessary steps to halt the
disappearance of Crimean Tatar individuals and to promptly investigate
those disappearances that have already occurred.

e. The Russian Federation shall cease and desist from acts of political and
cultural suppression against the ethnic Ukrainian people in Crimea,

including suspending restrictions on Ukrainian-language education and
respecting ethnic Ukrainian language and educat ional rights, while this case
is pending.

25. Ukraine reserves the right to amend this Request and the measures sought.

26. Ukraine respectfully asks that this Request be considered at th e Court’s earliest
possible opportunity, including the expeditious scheduling of a hearing.

7 Respectfully

Ms. OlenaZerkal
Deputy Foreign Minister ofUkraine
Agent ofUkraine

JJo January 2017

Document file FR
Document Long Title

Request for the indication of provisional measures of protection submitted by Ukraine

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