Ukraine envoy raps Germany over 'shameful' energy dependence on Russia
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[April 08, 2022]
By John O'Donnell
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Ukraine's ambassador
to Berlin has accused the German government of half-hearted support for
Kyiv and said his country had become a victim of Germany's "shameful"
energy dependence on Russia.
"It's not just Russian gas, it's oil, coal, metals, diamonds and other
raw materials. We (Ukraine) have become the biggest victim of this
perverted relationship. Ukrainians are paying for this failed German
policy with their lives," Andrij Melnyk told Reuters on Friday.
His comments underscore a growing frustration in Kyiv with the
government of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who has pledged support and
backed some sanctions against Russia over its six-week-old invasion of
Ukraine, but dragged its heels where experts believe it most counts - an
energy embargo.
"This kind of hypocrisy with Russia dates back to Nord Stream 1 (gas
pipeline)," said Melnyk. "Germany's huge dependence on Russia, at a time
of the worst aggression since the Second World War, is shameful."
After the German government put its highly contested new gas pipeline
from Russia, Nord Stream 2, on hold after the invasion, there have been
calls, unheeded in Berlin, to shut down Nord Stream 1, which has
funnelled Russian gas to Germany since 2011.
This week, the European Union agreed further sanctions on Russia,
including a coal embargo, but that measure was watered down by Germany.
The EU Commission had initially proposed a wind-down of three months.
That was extended to four months, said sources familiar with the
discussions, following pressure mostly from Germany, the EU's main
importer of Russian coal.
Scholz said Germany would need the full four months to implement the
ban.
"Germany is as far away from giving us the support we need today as it
was at the start of the war," Melnyk said. "More than 40 days later, the
German political elite apparently still does not believe that Ukraine
can win the war."
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German Chancellor Olaf Scholz holds a news conference after meeting
with the heads of the country's 16 federal states to discuss
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Berlin Germany April 7, 2022.
REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke/File Photo
Pressure is mounting on Germany.
Veronika Grimm, one of the government’s chief economic experts that
advises the chancellery, said Germany should harden its stance.
"Since the start of the war, due to the rocketing
price of gas, we (in the EU) have paid around 20 billion euros ($22
billion) to Russia," she told Reuters. "This money has undermined
the sanctions."
She said that while a gas embargo would hit the economy, it would be
"difficult but manageable".
"The debate in Germany about a gas embargo is far too black and
white," said Grimm. "There are a number of intermediate
alternatives, such as imposing duty charges on imports."
Ukraine's Melnyk said he had failed despite repeated attempts to
meet Scholz or Germany's foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock,
one-to-one.
"I have been trying to make the point that Germany needs to deliver
far more heavy weapons, as well as advocating our admission to the
European Union. I have not been able to deliver this message
personally to Baerbock and Scholz."
A government spokesperson said Scholz had been in regular contact
with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and that government
representatives met frequently with Ukrainian officials, including
the ambassador.
($1 = 0.9197 euros)
(Reporting By John O'Donnell; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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