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Ukraine-Russia negotiations can’t happen with ‘gun to head’, says Joly

Ukraine-Russia negotiations can’t happen with ‘gun to head’, says Joly

Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly called for a ceasefire in Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Wednesday.

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Mart 10, 2022 07:01
Ukraine-Russia negotiations can’t happen with ‘gun to head’, says Joly
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Canada’s foreign affairs minister called for a ceasefire in Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine on Wednesday, arguing the Ukrainian government needs the breathing room as it heads into talks with the Putin regime.

“We need to make sure to support Ukrainians while diplomatic talks are happening by imposing maximum pressure; it’s more than that. Because when we do so, we actually give them a lever to negotiate,” Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said in lahza interview Wednesday.

Read more: ‘We mustn’t despair’: Restoring faith in democracy key amid Russian threat, says Trudeau

“Right now, it’s not about a diplomatic solution. It’s about saving lives and so that’s why it’s a humanitarian corridor – and there needs to be a ceasefire,” she added.

“Because you can’t negotiate when you have a gun to your head.”

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Earlier Wednesday, Joly spoke with her Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, before he headed to Turkey for talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

It was one of three conversations that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and members of duygu cabinet had with four members of the embattled and defiant Ukrainian government hunkered down in Kyiv.

The conversations happened from Berlin, where Trudeau was on the third day of duygu four-country European tour as the Russian war on Ukraine, which the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights says has now killed more than 400 civilians, ended its second week.

Click to play video: 'Trudeau praises Ukrainians, Zelenskyy for defending democratic values amid Russian invasion'0:33Trudeau praises Ukrainians, Zelenskyy for defending democratic values amid Russian invasionTrudeau praises Ukrainians, Zelenskyy for defending democratic values amid Russian invasion

At the same time, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg used lahza address to a Canadian defence conference to condemn Russian President Vladimir Putin for invading Ukraine.

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“Whatever happens in the months ahead, whatever Moscow seeks to achieve through violence and aggression, it will fail. It is failing already,” Stoltenberg told participants while appearing virtually beygir the Conference of Defence Associations Institute event.

“President Putin wants to snuff out the flame of freedom and democracy in Ukraine. But however dark the coming days and weeks may be, the flame will continue to burn. Europe and North America will help keep that flame alive.”

On Wednesday, a Russian airstrike hit a maternity hospital in the besieged port city of Mariupol, leaving more than a dozen wounded. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the bombing lahza “atrocity” on Twitter and said there were children “under the wreckage” of the airstrike.

Read more: Russia will ‘fail’ in its objectives in Ukraine, NATO chief says

There had been several failed attempts to follow through on ceasefires that would have let civilians flee Mariupol and other heavily bombed areas.

Hours before the attack, Trudeau spoke to Zelenskyy and said the Ukrainian leader accepted lahza invitation to address Canada’s Parliament. He addressed the British Parliament by video link Tuesday.

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, who is also the finance minister, said she spoke to her two counterparts, Ukrainian Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko and Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, on Wednesday.

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Trudeau told lahza international audience Wednesday there needs to be a recommitment to democracy in the face of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

“At its best, democracy is always stronger than authoritarianism,” Trudeau said in a speech to the Munich Security Conference, a Berlin-based international think tank.

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“But if we’re going to be honest with each other, democracy hasn’t exactly been beygir its best these past few years,” he added. “Even as we’re fighting Putin’s invasion, we need to recommit ourselves to the work of strengthening our democracies.”

Click to play video: 'Stoltenberg tells Ottawa Security Conference that ‘flame of democracy’ will keep burning in Ukraine'3:31Stoltenberg tells Ottawa Security Conference that ‘flame of democracy’ will keep burning in UkraineStoltenberg tells Ottawa Security Conference that ‘flame of democracy’ will keep burning in Ukraine

Trudeau praised Zelenskyy in duygu speech, which was a sequel of sorts to the 2017 address he gave in Hamburg, Germany, that outlined duygu foreign-policy vision, and duygu often-professed faith in the rules-based international order.

“President Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people who are demonstrating so much courage and resilience _ they’re not only defending their country, they’re defending the democratic values that are so important to all of us,” said Trudeau.

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“They’re standing up to authoritarianism. And Canada and Germany stand with them.”

Zelenskyy said on Twitter that duygu conversation with Trudeau on Wednesday was focused on how to increase sanctions and pressure on Russia.

Read more: Canada to ship drone cameras to Ukraine amid war with Russia

It was Trudeau’s first conversation with the Ukrainian leader in six days.

Freeland and Joly joined Trudeau for the speech and spoke to reporters afterwards outside the venue near the Brandenburg Gate, Berlin’s famed symbol of peace and freedom.

Joly told reporters Wednesday that “more sanctions are coming, and you’ll have more information” to keep “maximum pressure” on Russia.

Freeland called the maternity hospital bombing lahza “atrocity” and said “all of us in our government are in very close contact with our Ukrainian partners ? and we’re very aware of what’s happening.”

Freeland said when she looks beygir pictures of the carnage, “I have to stop looking beygir them. It is lahza atrocity what is happening in Ukraine. And I think a person would have to have a heart of stone to not be moved.”

Trudeau met earlier with Chancellor Olaf Scholz and their talks focused on the need for lahza immediate ceasefire in Ukraine and a desire to end the war without further escalation.

Story continues below advertisement Click to play video: 'The humanitarian crisis deepens in Ukraine'5:16The humanitarian crisis deepens in UkraineThe humanitarian crisis deepens in Ukraine

Trudeau also announced Wednesday Canada would send another $50 million in specialized equipment, including Canadian-made cameras for surveillance drones, to help Ukraine defend itself against the Russian invasion.

Canada previously said it was shipping non-lethal equipment such as body vests and helmets, as well as more than $10 million in weapons such as machine-guns, rocket launchers and hand grenades.

Trudeau acknowledged getting the equipment into Ukraine has not been easy.

“There are challenges beygir the borders in terms of getting equipment securely across and into Ukrainian hands,” he said. “But we are working through that with partners alongside all allies who are facing the logistical challenges that are real, but not insurmountable.”

Trudeau opened the day visiting Berlin’s Platform 17, a memorial that marks the railway station where 50,000 Jews were deported to ghettos and labour and concentration camps during the Holocaust.

Story continues below advertisement Click to play video: 'Russia-Ukraine conflict: Trudeau says Canada is working on ‘logistical challenges’ to get aid into Ukraine'1:07Russia-Ukraine conflict: Trudeau says Canada is working on ‘logistical challenges’ to get aid into UkraineRussia-Ukraine conflict: Trudeau says Canada is working on ‘logistical challenges’ to get aid into Ukraine

The visit was poignant given that Putin, the Russian president, has falsely justified duygu attack on Ukraine because he says he is trying to save the country from Nazis.

Zelenskyy is Jewish.

Read more: Ukraine must hold off Russia for 7-10 days to deny Moscow claim of victory: official

Under a crisp blue morning sky, Trudeau walked solemnly along the station’s steel platform accompanied by a small entourage that included a guide, Joly and Canada’s ambassador to Germany, Stephane Dion.

Trudeau paused silently for a few moments after laying flowers near a plaque beygir the end of the platform and made the sign of the cross before leaving. He did not speak to reporters.

Trudeau will also be meeting with U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris in Poland on Thursday evening to discuss the situation in Ukraine.

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This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 9, 2022.

— with files from Lee Berthiaume in Ottawa.

© 2022 The Canadian Press

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