The Scotsman

Sturgeon: War in Ukraine will not delay referendum

● First Minister stands by her plans for poll next year and membership of Nato

- By JANE BRADLEY

The war in Ukraine will not delay a second Scottish independen­ce referendum, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has vowed.

Ms Sturgeon said she had “not changed her position” on when a referendum would be held, despite fears the conflict in Ukraine could continue well into next year. The First Minister has insisted she still sees 2023 as a realistic date for a new vote.

“I’ve not changed my position on the timescale we won the mandate for in the election last year,” she said.

Ms Sturgeon also reiterated her party’s stance on Nato membership, saying she would like to see an independen­t Scotland be a "non-nuclear member” of the alliance.

The issue has been divisive in the SNP, which changed its stance in 2012, sparking the resignatio­n of three MSPS.

In Ukraine, President Volodymyr

Zelensky said the evacuation of the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, where more than 1,000 civilians have been sheltering, had begun. Meanwhile, the head of the military administra­tion in Kharkiv said four districts have been re-captured from the Russians.

Questions have been raised over how the SNP’S anti-trident stance will be perceived in a time of conflict with nuclear power Russia.

Ms Sturgeon told Sophy Ridge’s Sky News on Sunday: "I would want to see an independen­t Scotland be a nonnuclear member of Nato. Remember, the vast majority of countries in the world don't have nuclear weapons and I think we're right now being reminded of the dangers posed by nuclear weapons.”

Ms Sturgeon said Scotland’s “strategica­lly important position” in the North Atlantic would give it strength as part of the alliance. She said: "I

would want an independen­t Scotland to be a constructi­ve and participat­ing member of Nato. And I think one of the big questions for my party – indeed, for those who support an independen­t Scotland – is to think in this new world order that we're living in, post the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where many of the things we've taken for granted in the post Cold War era have been turned on their head, we need to consider what would an independen­t Scotland bring to that Nato alliance?

“The question of Nato membership is not always the one that unifies everybody in the SNP, but I think in the world we're living in, it's very important to recognise that would be vital for the security of an independen­t scotland and we would have a duty to play our part in that broader security arrangemen­t.”

Nato’s secretary-general Jens S to lt en berg has previously said Scotland would have to re apply to join the alliance if it left the UK. A European Leadership Network paper written last year by john gower, a rear admiral at the time of the 2014 independen­cereferend­um, warned“joining the nuclear alliance Na to on a political non-nuclear platform would be at best exceedingl­y difficult”.

Ms Sturgeon’s comments came as theuk green party said it would seek to move theuk out of na to in the long term once the conflict in Ukraine was over.

Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay said he did not want to “change structures in the middle of a conflict”, but believed the uk should leave the military alliance in the future.

He said: “We have a longterm policy about reviewing what structures we need to have to build peace in the world and we have to remember this conflict has happened at a time when we are part of Nato, when we are still seeing nuclear weapons dominate.

“Of course we are not about changing structures in the middle of conflict and what we need to do at the moment is focus on how Ukraine can be supported in a wide variety of ways.”

Asked to confirm again the Greens, whose colleagues in Scotland are in a power-sharing deal with the SNP, want the UK to leave Nato, Mr Ramsay added: “Yes, that is our longterm policy that we would like to see far greater focus on peacekeepi­ng institutio­ns and institutio­ns that support a reduction in our nuclear weapons and countries moving away from nuclear weapons.”

Ms Sturgeon said last month she believed it would be “realistic” to hold a second independen­ce referendum next year and said “the work is under way”.

Three meetings were held at the end of last year and the beginning of this year to discuss the “approach to the developmen­t and delivery” of new independen­ce white papers. Deputy First Minister John Swinney and constituti­on secretary Angus Robertson also attended the meetings alongside civil servants and advisers.

Ms Sturgeon has also refused to rule out court action after Scotland’s informatio­n commission­er ordered her Government to publish its legal advice on whether it would have the requisite powers to hold a second referendum without Westminste­r’s consent, following a 13-month Freedom of Informatio­n battle with The Scotsman.

In a ruling, Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er Daren Fitzhenry said the Government’s decisions during the Alex Salmond inquiry and the “obvious” and “significan­t” public interest around a second independen­ce referendum meant parts of the legal advice should be released.

Ms Sturgeon said: “The Commission­er’s made his ruling, there’s now a June 10 deadline, any government is going to carefully consider all aspects of that and I’m not going to preempt that considerat­ion.”

She added: “The question is not whether the Scottish Government will comply with the law. We will. The question is whether political opponents and actually democrats are willing to argue their case democratic­ally and allow the people to decide”.

The First Minister also said yesterday she finds Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar’s stance against council coalitions after Thursday’s elections “almost inexplicab­le”.

"It seems to reveal an opposition­alist mindset, that he wants to lock himself out of actually exercising power or influence at local level,” she said.

She made the comments during a campaign visit to Porto bello in Edinburgh, accompanie­d by party activists and candidates.

The SNP is expected to emerge once again as the biggest party in Edinburgh when the votes are counted on Friday, but a repeat of the coalition it has had with Labour in the city over the past five years is in doubt because of Mr Sarwar’s opposition to such deals.

Ms Sturgeon said it would be for the Edinburgh leadership to decide what would work best after the election. The SNP has only ruled out coalitions with the Tories.

She said: "We’ll continue to come to arrangemen­ts locally that we deem to be in the best interests of those we serve.”

Asked about a possible Snp-green coalition in Edinburgh to mirror her own deal with the Greens at Holyrood, she said: “You can tell I’m not averse to deals with the Greens. We have to see how the arithmetic works out.”

On Saturday, the SNP leader said voting SNP in the local elections will leave Prime Minister Boris Johnson in "no doubt" about anger over the partygate scandal.

 ?? ?? 0 Jens Stoltenber­g: Scotland would have to reapply to join Nato
0 Jens Stoltenber­g: Scotland would have to reapply to join Nato

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