"Ukraine will prevail" protests held in Sydney, Tokyo
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[February 26, 2022]
By Stefica Nicol Bikes and Akiko Okamoto
SYDNEY/TOKYO (Reuters) -Several hundred
people marched in heavy rain in Sydney on Saturday chanting "Ukraine
will prevail" and demanding more action against Moscow, while protesters
in Tokyo called for Russia to be expelled from the United Nations
Security Council.
The fresh protests came as Russian and Ukrainian forces clashed in
fighting for Ukraine's capital and after Russia vetoed a draft U.N.
Security Council resolution that would have deplored the Kremlin
invasion of Ukraine.
From Tokyo through Warsaw and London to New York, thousands have
protested in recent days against the invasion, Europe's biggest security
crisis in decades.
Draped in Ukraine's blue and yellow flag and waving the country's
national banner, Sydney protesters also carried also signs condemning
Russian President Vladimir Putin's attempts to topple the Ukrainian
government.
Some speakers demanded that the government of Prime Minister Scott
Morrison expands sanctions against Moscow and bans Russian citizens from
visiting Australia, while others called for the NATO to step into the
conflict.
"I want more economic sanctions on Russia, I want military help for
Ukraine," said Katarina, a protester who gave only her first name. "I
want more action, more concrete action and less words. It's too late for
diplomacy right now."
Another protester, Mogdan, called on the Australian government to lead
other countries in attempts to stop Putin.
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Ukrainian children hold banners during a rally against Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, in Tokyo, Japan, February 26, 2022.
"It's World War Three, it's a war
not only on Ukraine, it's a war on everyone," the protester said.
A smaller protest took place in front of the Russian embassy in
Canberra, Australia's capital, with people carrying signs "Putin off
Ukraine" and "Stop War".
Several hundred Russian, Ukrainian and Japanese protesters gathered
in the busy Shibuya shopping district in central Tokyo, many with
their children and holding Ukrainian flags, chanting "stop the war"
and "stop Putin" in Japanese and English.
"I just want to say, 'Putin stop this, regain your sanity'," said
Hiroshi Sawada, a 58-year-old musician who attended the rally in
Tokyo.
A 28-year-old Russian worker who asked not to be named said none of
the people she knew from her home country supported the war. "We
hate what is just happening now in our country," she said.
Australia and Japan joined the United States, the European Union,
and many other countries in imposing a series of rounds of sanctions
against Russian politicians, businesses, and elite citizens over the
invasion.
(Reporting by Stefica Nicol Bikes in Sydney and Kantaro Komiya and
Akiko Okamoto in Tokyo; Writing by Lidia Kelly; Editing by William
Mallard)
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