Fiji Sun

Zelenskyy Asks New Zealand to Focus on War’s Ecological Toll

- Wellington,

New Zealand: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged New Zealand to take a leading role in focusing on the environmen­tal destructio­n his country is suffering as a result of Russia’s invasion.

Zelenskyy delivered his message via video link to lawmakers who packed the debating chamber at 8 a.m. Wednesday. He became just the second foreign leader to address New Zealand’s parliament, after Australia’s Julia Gillard did so in 2011.

Zelenskyy said it was possible to rebuild a nation’s economy and infrastruc­ture, even though it may take many years.

“But you can’t rebuild destroyed nature, just as you can’t restore destroyed lives,” he said.

Zelenskyy is pushing for a 10-point peace plan that, as well as environmen­tal protection, including items such as nuclear safety and justice. He has been asking various countries to take a lead on different points.

He said some of the environmen­tal effects of the war included poisoned groundwate­r, ravaged forests, flooded coal mines and

huge areas of Ukraine that remain contaminat­ed from unexploded

mines.

Zelenskyy thanked New Zealand

for their contributi­ons to Ukraine’s war effort so far and offered a message of hope.

“Various dictators and aggressors, they always fail to realize the strength of the free world’s government­s,” he said.

New Zealand

New Zealand announced it was providing another 3 million New Zealand dollars ($2 million) in humanitari­an aid through the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, adding to the NZ$8 million it had already provided.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told Zelenskyy her country’s support for Ukraine wasn’t determined by geography or diplomatic ties.

“Our judgment was a simple one,” she said.

“We asked ourselves the question, ‘What if it was us?’”

She said that in such a scenario, New Zealand would want nations in the internatio­nal community to use their voices, “regardless of their political systems, their distance, or their size.”

Lawmakers finished the address by singing a World War II-era song in the Indigenous Maori language.

 ?? Photo: ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appears via video during his address to the New Zealand Parliament in Wellington on December 14, 2022. AP
Photo: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appears via video during his address to the New Zealand Parliament in Wellington on December 14, 2022. AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji