European leaders visit Ukraine's ruined Irpin in show of support
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[June 16, 2022]
By Simon Lewis
IRPIN, Ukraine (Reuters) -The leaders of
France, Germany, Italy and Romania walked around ruined buildings and
wrecked cars in the Ukrainian town of Irpin on Thursday in a show of
support which Kyiv hopes will be followed by tougher action to help in
the war with Russia.
The tour of Irpin, the scene of heavy fighting early in the invasion,
was meant to highlight what Ukraine and its backers say were large-scale
atrocities committed by Russian troops.
Standing by gutted, burnt-out buildings, France's Emmanuel Macron,
Germany's Olaf Scholz, Italy's Mario Draghi and Romania's Klaus Iohannis,
looked stern as they listened to a Ukrainian minister explaining what
had happened there.
The leaders were shown the wreckage of a car which Ukraine says was
targeted by Russian troops when a mother and children were inside.
Russia denies allegations that its forces committed atrocities.
"It's a heroic city...marked by the stigma of barbarism," Macron told
reporters.
The leaders, dressed in suits but not wearing any visible protective
equipment, were surrounded by heavily armed soldiers.
Kyiv has accused France, Germany and, to a lesser extent, Italy, of
foot-dragging in their support for Ukraine, saying they have been slow
to deliver weapons and have put their own prosperity ahead of Ukraine's
freedom and security.
Asked about that criticism, Macron pointed to arms deliveries and
financial support.
"France and Europe have been standing by Ukraine and its population
since the beginning," he said.
Ukraine's bid to join the 27-nation European Union, and its demand for
more weapons to fight off Russia, are expected to be two main themes of
the EU leaders' talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy later
in the day. Zelenskiy did not accompany them to Irpin.
Shown a slogan on a wall of a damaged building in Irpin that said "Make
Europe not war," Macron said: "It's very moving to see that. This is the
right message."
After the leaders spoke to Irpin's mayor and other officials, Draghi
added: "Much of what they talked about was reconstruction. Words of
pain, of hope, but also of what they want to do in the future."
The Kremlin said the leaders should use their time with Zelenskiy to
take a "realistic look at the state of affairs" rather than discussing
more arms shipments to Kyiv.
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Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk walks next to
French President Emmanuel Macron at the train station, in Kyiv,
Ukraine, June 16, 2022. Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS
Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia's Security
Council, mocked the visit as having "zero use", "promised EU
membership and old howitzers to Ukraine".
EU CANDIDACY, WEAPONS
The EU executive is expected to propose on Friday that Ukraine
become a formal candidate for membership, diplomats and officials
say. That would be a significant political gesture to the country
but is also something EU leaders are very divided on.
"A balance has to be found between Ukraine's natural aspirations to
(join) the EU at a very special time, and attention to all the
countries which already have candidate status and are stuck in the
negotiation chapters," an Elysee official said.
Zelenskiy is expected to push his visitors to send more arms to help
his hard-pressed army withstand the Russian invaders.
Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Zelenskiy, said this week he was
concerned the three leaders would put pressure on Kyiv to accept a
peace deal favourable to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Addressing this concern, Draghi said on Tuesday it was important for
peace talks to open as soon as possible, but added they had to be
"on terms that Ukraine deems acceptable".
Ukraine has been particularly critical of Germany's military aid and
the country's ambassador to Berlin, Andrij Melnyk, told German
broadcaster NTV he expected Scholz to hand over heavy weapons that
had been long-promised but not yet delivered.
Scholz has dismissed allegations he has held back much-needed
military support, saying Germany was one of the biggest military and
financial backers of Ukraine, and that it was taking time to train
Ukrainian soldiers to use the sophisticated artillery systems that
it was offering.
(Additional reporting by Sarah Marsh and Andreas Rinke in Berlin,
John Irish, Michel Rose and Benoit Van Overstraeten in Paris;
Writing by Ingrid Melander, Crispian Balmer and Matthias Williams;
Editing by Toby Chopra, Mark Potter and Angus MacSwan)
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