MONTREAL (Reuters) -Russia failed to win enough support on Saturday to get elected to the United Nations aviation agency’s governing council, in the latest rebuke of Moscow for actions taken after its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Russia fell short of support needed to win back a seat on the International Civil Aviation Organization’s 36-nation governing council during the agency’s assembly, which runs through October 3 in Montreal.
Russia in 2022 lost its spot on the first part of the council, which includes countries like China, Brazil, the United States and Australia as “states of chief importance in air transport,” following its invasion of Ukraine.
A Russian representative immediately called for “a repeat round of voting.”
The ICAO sets global safety standards for civil aviation with the governing council playing a critical role in that process.
In addition to the war in Ukraine, Russia faces council condemnation for disturbing signals used in navigation, the Global Navigation Satellite System and Global Positioning System, charges that Moscow denies.
“They are the most aggressive abuser and violator of international agreements and international norms,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy told Reuters by phone earlier this week.
“How could we let someone come into a world organization that is truly making the airspace more dangerous, not more safe?”
(Reporting by Allison Lampert in Montreal and David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Bill Berkrot)