The Citizen (Gauteng)

UK pledges more aid to Ukraine

R46BN: YOUR SECURITY IS OUR SECURITY, SAYS TRUSS

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➳ We’re doubling down on support to Kyiv – British official.

Britain’s new Prime Minister Liz Truss yesterday vowed billions more in financial and military aid to Ukraine as she kicked off her debut foreign trip at the UN General Assembly.

Ahead of her first meeting with US President Joe Biden, Truss also conceded that a post-Brexit UK-US trade deal was unlikely for years.

“There aren’t currently any negotiatio­ns taking place with the US and I don’t have an expectatio­n those are going to start in the short to medium term,” she said en route to New York.

At the UN, Truss is also due to meet French President Emmanuel Macron and EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen. Like Biden’s White House, they are unhappy with her hard line on Brexit and Northern Ireland.

But Truss vowed to rally Western support at the UN over Ukraine, saying her government would match or exceed the £2.3 billion (about R46 billion) it plans to extend this year.

“Ukraine’s victories in recent weeks have been inspiratio­nal,” she said in a statement, after Kyiv’s forces pushed the Russian invaders out of almost all of the Kharkiv region in a lightning counteroff­ensive.

“My message to the people of Ukraine is this: the UK will continue to be right behind you every step of the way. Your security is our security.”

Boris Johnson’s successor flew out of London hours after delivering a biblical reading at Monday’s funeral of Queen Elizabeth II.

The late monarch appointed Truss as her 15th prime minister on 6 September, in one of her final ceremonial acts as head of state. She died two days later.

Truss said she was “hugely honoured” to be appointed, and praised the “huge outpouring of love and affection” shown towards Elizabeth, as well as the “huge amount of warmth towards” her successor King Charles III.

But Truss’ administra­tion started under a cloud due to a cost-of-living crisis brought on by Russia’s war in Ukraine.

She is due back in London tomorrow, a day before finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng delivers an emergency budget statement after the government vowed a costly scheme to cap rocketing energy bills.

Culture Secretary Michelle Donelan denied the financial crisis could force a rethink of the UK’s aid to Ukraine and the UK was “doubling down on our support”.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? BACK TO WORK. British Prime Minister Liz Truss leaves Westminste­r Abbey in London on Monday after the state funeral service for Queen Elizabeth II.
Picture: AFP BACK TO WORK. British Prime Minister Liz Truss leaves Westminste­r Abbey in London on Monday after the state funeral service for Queen Elizabeth II.

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