Otago Daily Times

Ardern targets ‘immoral’ Russia at UN

- THOMAS COUGHLAN

NEW YORK: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has held a formal meeting with Ukraine Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal at the United Nations in New York.

The meeting occurred just hours after Ms Ardern called for a ‘‘rallying cry from the world’’ against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

‘‘What you see in Ukraine is illegal, it is immoral. It is causing a loss of civilian life and that loss could extend if, as [Russian President Vladimir] Putin has claimed, he expands the types of weapons used in this war,’’ she said.

It was the second meeting in less than 24 hours between Ms Ardern and Mr Shmyhal. Ms Ardern met him on Tuesday afternoon, New York time, at a food security event.

Their second meeting was a formal bilateral meeting and more significan­t, lasting 30 minutes.

‘‘Please know New Zealand is committed to continuing to support you,’’ Ms Ardern said.

Mr Shmyhal said he was ‘‘deeply grateful’’ to New Zealand for its support and hoped to meet Ms Ardern again in a ‘‘peaceful, liberated’’ Ukraine.

The meeting, which was kept deeply secret out of security concerns, occurred at an ominous time in the war.

Mr Putin had recently escalated tensions in Ukraine by calling 300,000 reservists in what the Russian leader called a ‘‘partial mobilisati­on’’ and making veiled threats of nuclear warfare.

Tensions are also escalating over referendum­s to be held in parts of Ukraine over whether they should unify with Russia. It is believed these referendum­s will provide a pretext for further escalation of the war.

Ahead of the meeting, Ms Ardern said he would be seeking Mr Shmyhal’s views ‘‘on the recent rhetoric from President Putin both around the use of potentiall­y wider weapons of warfare’’, as well as ‘‘statements [Putin’s] made around referendum­s’’.

Earlier in the day, Ms Ardern hit out at the referendum­s to be held by Russianbac­ked separatist­s. The polls are widely seen as an attempt to create a pretext for a broader invasion.

Ms Ardern decried these ‘‘sham’’ referendum­s, which appear to be designed to give Mr Putin an excuse to annex parts of Ukraine into Russia.

Mr Putin also made a veiled threat to use nuclear or other powerful weapons if he felt it necessary.

Ms Ardern said she spoke to Mr Shmyhal about ‘‘the ongoing escalation we see in Ukraine’’.

She also reaffirmed New Zealand’s ongoing support for Ukraine.

Ms Ardern said everything she had heard from Ukraine was that New Zealand was doing a ‘‘significan­t amount’’ to assist with its efforts.

‘‘New Zealand has always stood firmly against this illegal invasion, but we stand firmly against an escalation of this conflict.’’

She said the threat of escalation ‘‘flies in the face of the lie they have told that are there to liberate others’’.

United States President Joe Biden delivered his address to the United Nations General Assembly yesterday. In his speech, he decried Russia’s escalation of the conflict and veiled threat to use nuclear weapons.

Mr Biden said Mr Putin made ‘‘irresponsi­ble nuclear threats’’ and repeated a longstandi­ng American position that a ‘‘nuclear war cannot be won, and must never be fought’’.

Ms Ardern said the speech reflected ‘‘the time we are in’’.

‘‘Even in the last 24 hours we have seen an extraordin­ary escalation coming from Putin.’’

Ms Ardern will make her own speech to the General Assembly later this week.

She earlier conceded that Ukraine would dominate this week at the United Nations.

Ms Ardern and Mr Shymhal also discussed postconfli­ct reconstruc­tion and the legal institutio­ns that could be used to hold Russia to account for its actions. —

 ?? PHOTO: MFAT ?? Solid commitment . . . Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern meets Denys Shmyhal, Prime Minister of Ukraine, in New York.
PHOTO: MFAT Solid commitment . . . Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern meets Denys Shmyhal, Prime Minister of Ukraine, in New York.

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