• Latest
  • Trending
uk

In The UK Parliament House Of Lords

February 24, 2024
heart attack

Study shows kidney drug can boost treatment for heart attack patients

September 2, 2024
Swaminathan

RBI’s stringent actions intended to protect customers: Swaminathan

September 2, 2024
Dhanush, Shourya and Vania

Dhanush, Shourya and Vania trio break world record in Air Rifle at Deaf World Championships

September 2, 2024
Indian equity indices opened flat on August 29 due to negative cues from Asian and US markets

Sensex closes above 82,500 points for first time ever

September 2, 2024
coal

India’s coal production sees 6.48 pc growth at 384 MT in April-August

September 2, 2024
railways

Cabinet nod to Rs 18,036 cr project to connect Mumbai, Indore via shortest rail route

September 2, 2024
telecom manufacturing

Aim to democratise telecom services under Digital Bharat Nidhi initiative

September 2, 2024
ace ev

Indian commercial vehicle industry reverses decline, to see modest growth in FY25

September 2, 2024
India’s manufacturing growth

India’s manufacturing growth eases in August, stays above long-run average

September 2, 2024
Supreme Court

SC dismisses PIL seeking caste-based census

September 2, 2024

Indian Navy’s P-8I lands in France, marking its first ever deployment in Europe

September 2, 2024
PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar

PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar on winning silver medal in Paralympics

September 2, 2024
Blitz India UK Edition
Contact
Download
  • Home
  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • News
  • Education
  • Videos
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media
No Result
View All Result

In The UK Parliament House Of Lords

DEBATE: UKRAINE

by Blitzindiamedia
February 24, 2024
in Record
0
uk
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The following are the excerpts of the proceeding in the House of Lords on the situation in Ukraine

We must recognise that, with Russia showing no signs of relenting in its aggression, these sanctions will be needed for the foreseeable future, and should be progressively strengthened in both their scope and, most particularly, their implementation

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

In The UK Parliament House Of Commons

In The UK Parliament House Of Lords

Lord Hannay

Lord Hannay of Chiswick (CB)

MY Lords, it is a great privilege to follow two speakers with whom I am in such complete agreement, and who have stated the reasons for supporting Ukraine so eloquently. I begin by declaring an interest because your Lordships’ European Affairs Committee has just begun a new inquiry into the implications of everything that is happening in Ukraine on the UK’s relationship with the European Union. I am not speaking on behalf of that committee, as we have only just begun our report, but I assure the House that what is said in this debate will be a valuable contribution to what we are putting our minds to between now and the end of the year.

The debate we held in this House the day after Russia launched its war of aggression against Ukraine in February 2022 was a memorable one. It was memorable because it demonstrated from the outset that there were going to be no party divisions in this country in our response to that aggression and our support for Ukraine.

It was memorable too because that unity was based on a clear-eyed recognition that Russia’s aggression was not only a contravention of international rules as fundamental as those in the UN charter and the 1990 Paris accords on European security, but because it would directly threaten our own security should Russia succeed in its attempt to overthrow the Ukrainian state.

Those fundamentals remain as true today as they were then, and the Government and opposition parties deserve credit for standing by them and taking effective action to sustain them.

What has changed since our debate on the first day after the aggression began is the realisation of Ukraine’s remarkable resilience and success in repelling an onslaught from apparently superior military capabilities. This is all the more reason to stand firm now, even if the costs in both military and economic terms are inevitably painful—even more so in human terms for the Ukrainians.

Part of our response has been the array of sanctions on exports to and imports from Russia. We must recognise that, with Russia showing no signs of relenting in its aggression, these sanctions will be needed for the foreseeable future, and should be progressively strengthened in both their scope and, most particularly, their implementation. We need a more structured frame- work for co-operation in these tasks with the European Union and its member states, whose actions on sanctions have far exceeded what might previously have been expected. I hope, in replying, that the Minister will be less reticent about the need for such a framework, such as we have already with the United States.

We also need to co-operate with the EU and its member states in the planning and first stages of Ukraine’s reconstruction. One conference, welcome though it was, is not enough. The European Union, within the ambit of negotiating Ukraine’s accession, which I believe will be decided at the end of this year, will inevitably be the largest donor in civil terms—I am not talking about military support. It is only in our interest to work closely with it and to avoid any scope for being played off against each other.

We also need to find ways of giving effect to our commitment in the NATO summit communiqué last July for nonEU members of NATO—we are one of those—to contribute positively to the strengthening of EU defence and security policies. Our score on that is pretty skimpy so far: a bid to join the mobility partnership and only after the US and Canada have already done so. Is there not more in the pipeline, or are we content for EU-NATO co-operation to proceed without our direct involvement? I think that would be a mistake.

While we need to recognise that we have so far been less successful than we might have hoped in enlisting what is now known as the global South in support of sanctions and reconstruction, we must not accept that shortfall as inevitable or irremediable. The hard fact is that there are many countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America which are put at risk by Putin riding roughshod over the UN charter and which will be even more at risk if Russia succeeds in its aggression.

We should not be too hesitant about explaining those points, although we should do so in polite and non-aggressive terms. I suggest that we also need to recognise that, if we are to list more countries in the global South, more attention must be paid to and action taken on the priorities of those countries, most particularly on climate change, health, the handling of debt and the supply of essential foodstuffs.

It is not the time now, while the war is still raging, to address decisively Ukraine’s bid to join NATO, but we will need to in due course. …

So much for some of the diplomatic challenges we face in this new Cold War which Russia triggered by its aggression. It could well last as long as the previous one, and we should be prepared for that. What we cannot afford to do is flinch from the prospect because it will bring some unwelcome military and economic burdens.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Blitzindiamedia News Subscription

Search

No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation

Navigate Site

  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • New India
  • Legal
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • The Blitz
  • G20 Podium
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • Focus
  • Opinion
  • Booming Britain
  • Perspective
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • Download

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation