Tag: Zelensky

  • I Believe India Will Help Restore Rules-based Order: Zelenskyy As PM Modi Assures All Help

    I Believe India Will Help Restore Rules-based Order: Zelenskyy As PM Modi Assures All Help

    Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Saturday, May 20 spoke to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the G7 Summit. Taking to Twitter, the Ukrainian President said, “I spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. I gave an update on the progress of our peace formula. We have already passed many stages of presenting the formula to leaders and countries from different parts of the world.”

    “The day before, the formula was successfully presented to the participants of the Arab League Summit,” added Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    Zelenskyy was convinced that India will participate in the restoration of the rules-based international order.

    “I believe that India will participate in the restoration of the rules-based international order that all free nations clearly need,” he said.

    India will do whatever possible to help resolve Ukraine conflict: PM Modi
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi further assured the Ukrainian President that he would do whatever is possible to help in resolving the Ukraine conflict.

    “India and I will do whatever we can to resolve the conflict,” said PM Modi in his first meeting with the Ukrainian President since the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Notably, the Russia-Ukraine conflict began last year on February 24.

    “For the past 1-1.5 years, we have had telephonic conversations, but after Glasgow, we are meeting after a long time,” said PM Modi.

    Zelenskyy on G-7
    Talking about the G-7, Zelenskyy tweeted, “Peace Formula. We attract as many countries and leaders as possible for the sake of Ukraine. Long-term support programs for Ukraine. Finance and economy. The first day in Hiroshima ahead of the G7 is very powerful. The second day will be even more powerful.”

    “I told Georgia about the agreements at the Arab League Summit. We looked at how we can enhance with Italy our capabilities to protect life from Russian air terror,” the Ukraine President said while giving details about his first day in the Japanese city of Hiroshima.

    He further expressed gratitude to the UK PM for his leadership in developing capabilities in the sky. The UK very actively tackles the issue of modern fighter jets for Ukraine and these are historical things, he said.

    It is pertinent to note that the Day 2 of the G7 summit was eventful and was filled with several meetings and commitments for a better International order. Leaders including Biden, and PM Modi attended the G7 Outreach Session. The event organised in the Japanese city of Hiroshima was hosted by the country’s PM Fumio Kishida. Kishida spoke at the G7 working session on food, health and development.

  • Zelensky to attend Japan G7 summit in person

    Zelensky to attend Japan G7 summit in person

    KIEV (Ukraine): Ukrainian government officials have confirmed that President Volodymyr Zelensky will attend the ongoing G7 Leaders’ Summit in Hiroshima, Japan, in person, marking his first trip to Asia since Russia launched its full scale invasion in February 2022.

    a live TV address to the nation, Oleksii Danilov, Secretary of the National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine, said: “Who would doubt that our President would be present there? We are confident that our President will be where he needs to be, anywhere in the world, to address the sustainability of our country.

    “Very important things will be decided there, so the physical presence of our President is absolutely important in order to defend our interests, to provide clear proposals and clear arguments on the events that are taking place in our country.”

    The announcement comes a day after the Japanese government said on Thursday that Zelensky will attend the three-day Summit online,reports Ukrayinska Pravda.

    In his announcement, Danilov also stressed the importance of face-to-face meetings. “Because when a person is far away, across the ocean or somewhere else, they do not always feel and understand what is happening here in our country,” he added.

    “It is the physical presence of our president that is extremely, extremely important at such events,” CNN quoted the top official as saying

    G7 member countries — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the US — include Ukraine’s largest backers.

    the Summit got underway, a joint statement of the G7 leaders said: “We are renewing our commitment to provide the financial, humanitarian, military and diplomatic support Ukraine requires for as long as it takes.

    “We are imposing further sanctions and measures to increase the costs to Russia and those who are supporting its war effort. We are also building on the success of our efforts to ensure that Russia is no longer able to weaponise the availability of energy against the world.”

    The statement also said that “Russian troops’ complete and unconditional withdrawal” is required for peace, reports the BBC.

    The Summit’s main point of focus is the Ukraine war, and the US will also announce fresh sanctions against Russia, including a ban on 70 entities from receiving US exports, as well as 300 new mesures on other individuals or entities, aimed at crippling Moscow’s “war machine” in Kiev.

    The UK has also announced new sanctions against Russia, targeting companies connected to the theft of Ukrainian grain and those involved in the shipment of Russian energy.

    Meanwhile, Arab diplomats confirmed to CNN that Zelenksy will first stop at Jeddah to attend the Arab League’s 32nd Summit on Friday.Although, there has been no official confirmation on this development from Ukraine. this month, he visited France, Germany and the UK, where he secured defence aid packages worth millions of dollars.

    -IANS

  • Ukraine’s Zelenskyy visits International Criminal Court

    Ukraine’s Zelenskyy visits International Criminal Court

    KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Thursday made an unannounced visit to the International Criminal Court, which has issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin for alleged war crimes in Ukraine.

    The visit came a day after Zelenskyy denied that Ukrainian forces were responsible for what the Kremlin called an attempt to assassinate Putin in a drone attack on Moscow. The Kremlin promised retaliation for what it termed a “terrorist” act.

    On a visit to Helsinki on Wednesday, Zelenskyy told reporters: “We didn’t attack Putin. We leave it to (the) tribunal” — an apparent reference to the ICC.

    Ukraine’s military claimed three Russian drones that hit the southern city of Odesa early Thursday had “for Moscow” and “for the Kremlin” written on them, seemingly referring to the strikes in Moscow. Also, Kyiv was the target of an air attack for the third time in four days.

    In total, Ukraine’s Air Forces intercepted 18 out of 24 Iranian-made drones launched by Russian forces in various regions. No casualties were reported.

    Zelenskyy, meanwhile, was visiting The Hague, which hosts the ICC as well as the United Nations’ top judicial organ, the International Court of Justice. The Dutch city calls itself the international city of peace and justice.

    Zelenskyy was welcomed outside the ICC building by the court’s president, Poland’s Piotr Hofmanski. Staff crowded at windows to get a glimpse of Zelenskyy’s arrival and raised a Ukrainian flag next to the court’s own flag outside the building.

    Judges at the ICC last month announced they found “reasonable grounds to believe” that Putin and his commissioner for children’s rights were responsible for the unlawful deportation and transfer of children from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia. But the chances of Putin standing trial in The Hague are remote. The court does not have a police force to execute its warrants, and the Russian leader is unlikely to travel to any of the ICC’s 123 member states that are under an obligation to arrest him if they can.

    The ICC said in a March 18 statement that Putin “is allegedly responsible for the war crime of unlawful deportation of (children) and that of unlawful transfer of (children) from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation.” ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan has made repeated visits to Ukraine and is setting up an office in Kyiv to facilitate his ongoing investigations.

    However, the ICC does not have jurisdiction to prosecute Putin for the crime of aggression — the unlawful invasion of another sovereign country. The Dutch government has offered to host a court that could be established to prosecute the crime of aggression and an office is being established to gather evidence.

    The new International Centre for Prosecution of the Crime of Aggression should be operational by summer, the European Union’s judicial cooperation agency, Eurojust, said in February.

    Questions continued to swirl around Russia’s claim that it foiled an attack by Ukrainian drones on the Kremlin early Wednesday.

    Putin wasn’t in the Kremlin at the time and was at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, his spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti.

    There was no independent verification of the purported attack, which Russia authorities said occurred overnight but presented no evidence to support it. Questions also arose as to why it took the Kremlin hours to report the incident and why videos of it also surfaced later in the day.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the US was “unable to confirm the authenticity” of Russia’s claims of a Ukrainian attack on Moscow. Asked whether the US believed Putin was a lawful target of any potential Ukrainian strike, Jean-Pierre said that since the start of the conflict, the US was “not encouraging or enabling Ukraine to strike beyond its border.” Asked whether the US was concerned that the accusation might have been a false flag operation by Russia to serve as a pretext for more aggressive military action on Ukraine, Jean-Pierre said she didn’t want to speculate, but added, “Obviously Russia has a history of doing things like this.” The Netherlands has been a strong supporter of the Ukrainian war effort since Russia’s invasion last year. Among military equipment Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s government has promised are 14 modern Leopard 2 tanks it is buying together with Denmark. They are expected to be delivered next year. The Netherlands also joined forces with Germany and Denmark to buy at least 100 older Leopard 1 tanks for Ukraine.

    Among other military hardware, it also sent two Patriot air defence missile systems and promised two naval minehunter ships as well as sending military forensic experts to assist war crime investigations. Zelenskyy’s visit came on the day the Dutch remember their war dead.

    Two Russian oil facilities in southern regions of the country near Ukraine were attacked by drones in what appeared to be a series of attacks on fuel depots behind enemy lines, Russian media said Thursday. Four drones struck an oil refinery in the Krasnodar region, Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported, citing law enforcement sources. Another facility was reportedly hit in the neighbouring Rostov region.