Tag: 2022

  • Suella Braverman – 2022 Statement on Small Boat Crossings

    Suella Braverman – 2022 Statement on Small Boat Crossings

    The statement made by Suella Braverman, the Home Secretary, in the House of Commons on 14 November 2022.

    Today I am updating Parliament on an innovative arrangement between the UK and France to strengthen our bilateral partnership to tackle illegal migration at the shared border, with a focus on small boats crossings.

    Since the bilateral arrangement reached in July 2021, the UK and France have been working to reinforce our collaboration to address illegal migration. This new arrangement builds upon the successes we have had over the last year.

    In 2021, our joint efforts saw more than 23,000 dangerous and unnecessary crossings being prevented. To date in 2022, over 30,000 crossing attempts have been prevented.

    Joint working between UK and French officers has secured more than 140 convictions connected to people smuggling since the start of 2020—and these criminals now face a combined 400 years behind bars.

    The UK-France Joint Intelligence Cell has so far dismantled 55 organised crime groups and secured over 500 arrests since its inception in 2020.

    However, the number of attempted and successful crossings continues to rise. To that end, the UK and France will intensify co-operation with a view to making the small boat route unviable, save lives, dismantle organised crime groups, and prevent and deter illegal migration in transit countries and further upstream.

    The UK and France will adopt a more integrated and effective approach. Our new partnership with France is underpinned by a set of shared joint strategic objectives and a joint operational plan and builds on the shared commitments under the Sandhurst Treaty.

    Our joint plan signifies a step-change in our joint ambition and co-operation to prevent dangerous crossings and further risk to life. Under the plan, for the first time, UK officers will join French law enforcement teams as embedded observers, sharing real-time information.

    The UK has pledged a financial investment of up to €72.2 million—around £62.2 million—in 2022-23 to France to assist in the delivery of our joint plan. The objectives of our joint plan are part of a multi-year strategy that considers other innovative steps that can be taken to address illegal migration at a bilateral and multilateral level. This new partnership recognises the importance of co-operation with other neighbouring countries and European partners on a ‘whole of route approach’. The UK and France have committed to work together to tackle the rise in illegal migration from Albania and will maintain regular dialogue to respond effectively to new and emerging migration challenges.

    A copy of the joint statement which sets out further details on this partnership will be published on the www.gov.uk website and will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses.

  • Andrew Mitchell – 2022 Statement on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

    Andrew Mitchell – 2022 Statement on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

    The statement made by Andrew Mitchell, the Minister of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, in the House of Commons on 14 November 2022.

    I would like to update the House on the UK’s contribution to the Seventh Replenishment of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (the Global Fund).

    The Government have no doubt of the huge value and importance of the work of the Global Fund. The Foreign Secretary, the Chancellor, and I, have therefore very carefully considered our pledge to the seventh replenishment, balancing the needs of the fight against the three diseases with the many other demands on the aid budget. I would like to reassure the House that we have maintained communication with the Global Fund throughout.

    UK resilience, prosperity, and security depends on achieving our global health goals and supporting other countries, especially the least developed, to do the same. Countries with better health systems and healthier people are more likely to be stable and prosperous. The covid-19 pandemic has shown how health emergencies can reverse countries’ economic and social progress—and how global health is a field where international co-operation is vital.

    The UK is a leader within this. We joined with others to create the Global Fund because we refused to accept the loss of millions of lives every year to diseases that were both preventable and treatable. It has proven its successful three-way partnership model between the private sector, civil society and governments and we are proud to have contributed over £4.4 billion to the Global Fund, and as third largest donor, to have been an important part of its success. Together we have cut the mortality rate of the three diseases by more than half, helping to save 50 million lives, while improving access to prevention and treatment, building the strong and inclusive health systems that underpin all health services, and helping countries respond to the covid-19 pandemic which threatens all these hard-won health development gains.

    However, a child still dies of malaria nearly every minute. Nine out of 10 Commonwealth citizens still live in malaria endemic countries. AIDS is still the leading cause of death for young women across our Commonwealth and tuberculosis is a top leading infectious disease killer globally.

    We remain committed to the mission of the Global Fund. The UK will therefore contribute £1 billion to the seventh replenishment of the Global Fund, helping to save over 1.2 million lives and partnering with others to support implementation of its new strategy. This pledge is drawn from our current ODA allocation and, as well as helping to save lives and prevent over 28 million new cases and infections, this funding will also help to build strong and inclusive health systems and support countries to prepare for and prevent future pandemic threats, helping to build a better and safer world for everyone. It will make an important contribution to our priority of ending the preventable deaths of mothers, babies and children, helping to provide medicine for 170,000 mothers to prevent transmitting HIV to their babies.

    The Global Fund is without question one of the most highly efficient and effective global health mechanisms in development. We owe it to both UK taxpayers and the communities it serves to demonstrate how and where the Fund performs with full openness and transparency. I will therefore be drawing up a UK-Global Fund performance agreement to help to reassure our taxpayers and professional interests that a strong and sustained focus on UK priorities such as strengthening health systems and putting health equity, gender and human rights are at the very core of the Global Fund’s work.

    We are proud of our record in global health. We have for decades worked at home and abroad to strengthen health systems, to improve nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene, champion sexual and reproductive health and rights, improve access to vaccines and fight infectious diseases. We are one of the largest donors to the international covid-19 response. We are a long-term funder of innovation, developing new technologies, generating the evidence to enable delivery at scale and promoting access for those who need it most.

    I would like to thank Members across both Houses of Parliament for their invaluable advice, interest, and support on this investment.

  • Kevin Hollinrake – 2022 Statement on Product Safety – Transitional Arrangements

    Kevin Hollinrake – 2022 Statement on Product Safety – Transitional Arrangements

    The statement made by Kevin Hollinrake, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, in the House of Commons on 14 November 2022.

    I have today laid before Parliament the draft statutory instrument Product Safety and Metrology (Amendment and Transitional Provisions) Regulations 2022 and an accompanying draft explanatory memorandum. The instrument will provide businesses with additional time to transition to the post-exit independent UKCA regime, providing businesses with flexibility and choice on how to comply with product regulations.

    We are committed to doing all we can to provide flexibility for industry. These measures intend to reduce immediate burdens and costs for businesses, in light of current cost of living and global supply chain challenges, whilst maintaining high standards of product safety.

    The main purposes of this instrument are to:

    Extend acceptance of certain products meeting EU requirements and markings on the market in Great Britain for a further two years, until 31 December 2024.This intends to provide businesses with flexibility and choice on how to comply with product regulations.

    And, as previously announced on 20 June 2022, but with updated timelines:

    Provide that where manufacturers, or other relevant persons, have acted under EU conformity assessment procedures by 31 December 2024, that action will be treated as having been taken under the UK conformity assessment procedures until the expiry of the certificate, or until 31 December 2027, whichever is sooner. This is intended to reduce immediate costs associated with third-party retesting and recertification and make the transition to UKCA compliance easier for businesses.

    Extend existing labelling provisions for UKCA marking, importer information and responsible persons’ information until 31 December 2027. This is intended to reduce costs and burdens associated with fulfilling labelling requirements.

    There are different rules for medical devices, construction products, cableways, transportable pressure equipment, unmanned aircraft systems, rail products, cosmetics and marine equipment. There are also different rules for Northern Ireland.

    The statutory instrument will be made using powers under section 8 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. Further details about the changes and their effects are contained in section 7 of the accompanying draft explanatory memorandum. The draft of this instrument and the accompanying draft explanatory memorandum can be found on gov.uk.

    My officials will continue to engage with industry closely to provide businesses with support, and to understand how to take a pragmatic approach to improving regulation to the benefit of businesses and consumers. This will include continuing to review the UK regulatory framework to understand how we could reduce costs and burdens for businesses in the longer term.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Gangs Violence Matrix to be redesigned as focus on tackling violence continues [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Gangs Violence Matrix to be redesigned as focus on tackling violence continues [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Met Police on 15 November 2022.

    The Metropolitan Police Service has reached a legal agreement with Liberty after proceedings were brought in relation to the Gangs Violence Matrix (GVM).

    Tackling violence is one of the Met’s highest priorities and the use of data and intelligence sits at the heart of that mission.

    Tools such as the GVM are essential in protecting the public but we also acknowledge that earning and maintaining the trust of the communities we police is just as important.

    In recent years we have worked closely with the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) to improve the working of the GVM.

    The focus of that work has been on reducing – or ideally eliminating – disproportionality in the GVM while ensuring that the processes around its use are transparent. These are similar themes to those raised by Liberty in their judicial challenge.

    While we have made progress in these areas, the most recent review by MOPAC published on 31 October showed that disproportionality remained.

    As a result, we took the decision to remove more than 1,100 people from the lowest (green) category of the GVM. This has already been completed.

    Moving forward we have committed to the complete redesign of the matrix, informed by academic research and engagement with partners and communities over the coming months.

    As a result of these actions, a settlement was able to be reached between the Met and Liberty.

    Assistant Commissioner Matt Twist said: “To effectively confront gang-related violence and protect those in our communities at risk of exploitation by criminal groups, we must make the best use of intelligence and data.

    “It’s crucial that we hold, use and share that information in a responsible way that meets our legal requirements and maintains the confidence of communities.

    “The GVM has been in use since 2012 and it has been an effective tool during that time, playing a part in results that have had a genuine impact on protecting the public.

    “But we acknowledge that it does not have the full confidence of the public and that there have been improvements in statistical methods and technologies since its introduction. To keep pace with those changes and to ensure we maintain the trust of Londoners, the GVM needs to be redesigned.

    “The redesign will be achieved in collaboration with partners and community groups, informed by the most relevant and leading academic research.

    “This work will take time but we are not waiting for it to be completed before taking action.

    “Having reflected on MOPAC’s most recent review and on the continuing disproportionality that it highlighted, we have already removed more than 1,100 of the lowest risk individuals, representing 65 per cent of those on the GVM.”

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech to the G20 Summit

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech to the G20 Summit

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, at the G20 Summit on 15 November 2022.

    Dear President Widodo!

    Dear colleagues! The world’s majority, which stands with us!

    I address you in Ukrainian, but in front of each of you on the table you will find our proposals. In your language. In demonstration of respect for you.

    I have just returned to our capital. Returned from the city of Kherson.

    Kherson is one of the key cities in the south of our country and the only regional centre that Russia managed to occupy after February 24.

    And now Kherson is already liberated.

    What does it mean? For Ukraine, this liberation operation of our Defence Forces is reminiscent of many battles of the past, which became turning points in the wars of the past.

    Those battles symbolized such changes, after which people already knew who will be victorious even though the ultimate victory still had to be fought for.

    It is like, for example, D-Day – the landing of the Allies in Normandy. It was not yet a final point in the fight against evil, but it already determined the entire further course of events. This is exactly what we are feeling now.

    Now – when Kherson is free.

    To liberate our entire land from the Russists, we still will have to fight for a while longer… To fight! However, if the victory will be ours in any case, and we are sure of it, then shouldn’t we try to implement our formula for peace to save thousands of lives and protect the world from further destabilizations?

    That is why I want to present our vision of the path to peace – how to actually achieve it. And not only for us, but also for all of you, your allies and partners.

    In my statement in September of this year at UN General Assembly, I presented Ukraine’s formula for peace. A formula of peace for the world.

    Just when the world was hoping to recover from the blows of the pandemic, the Russian war provoked a whole series of new global challenges. This must be stopped!

    There is a set of solutions that need to be implemented. And I want the conversation about it to be public, not behind the scenes. I want it to be discussed in specific terms, and not in broad strokes.

    Maybe I’ll go over the allotted time limit.

    But the issue of peace is worth it.

    I want this aggressive Russian war to end justly and on the basis of the UN Charter and international law. Not “somehow” – according to the apt formulation of the UN Secretary-General António Guterres.

    Ukraine should not be offered to conclude compromises with its conscience, sovereignty, territory and independence. We respect the rules and we are people of our word.

    Ukraine has always been a leader in peacekeeping efforts, and the world has witnessed it. And if Russia says that it supposedly wants to end this war, let it prove it with actions.

    Apparently, one cannot trust Russia’s words, and there will be no Minsks-3, which Russia would violate immediately after signing.

    If there are no concrete actions to restore peace, it means that Russia simply wants to deceive all of you again, deceive the world and freeze the war just when its defeats have become particularly notable.

    We will not allow Russia to wait it out, build up its forces, and then start a new series of terror and global destabilization.

    I am convinced now is the time when the Russian destructive war must and can be stopped.

    So, here are the proposals of Ukraine:

    The first is radiation and nuclear safety.

    No one has the right to blackmail the world with a radioactive disaster. This is an axiom.

    However, in front of the eyes of the whole world, Russia has turned our Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant into a radioactive bomb that can explode at any moment. Where will the radiation cloud go? Perhaps towards the territory of the EU. Maybe to Türkiye. Maybe to the Middle East. I consider as criminal even a hypothetical possibility of such a scenario!

    Radiation safety must be restored. The IAEA has already provided respective recommendations, confirming all the risks that we have repeatedly raised. Therefore, Russia must immediately withdraw all its militants from the territory of the Zaporizhzhia NPP. The station must be immediately transferred to the control of the IAEA and the Ukrainian personnel. The normal connection of the station to the power grid must be restored immediately so that nothing threatens the stability of the reactors.

    We proposed that IAEA missions are sent to all Ukrainian nuclear plants – four of them, 15 nuclear units in total. Plus the Chornobyl plant, which has been shut down and is under conservation. Such missions can verify that any hostile activity against Ukrainian nuclear facilities has indeed ceased.

    How long does it take to implement it? Russia can begin the demilitarization of the Zaporizhzhia NPP as early as tomorrow if it is really ready to restore the radioactive safety it violated.

    The same goes for the crazy threats of nuclear weapons that Russian officials resort to. There are and cannot be any excuses for nuclear blackmail. And I thank you, dear G-19, for making this clear.

    However, please use all your power to make Russia abandon nuclear threats. The basis for such efforts can be the Budapest Memorandum and respective capabilities of the signatory states.

    The second challenge is food security.

    Thanks to the strong participation of the UN, Türkiye and other partners, we have demonstrated how the cooperation of a few can restore food security for the many.

    I believe our export grain initiative deserves an indefinite extension – no matter when the war ends.

    The right to food is a fundamental right of every person in the world.

    Since July, Ukraine has exported over 10 million tons of food by sea. We can increase exports by several million tons per month. Thus for this I propose to expand the grain export initiative to our other ports – in particular, to the ports of Mykolaiv and “Olvia” in the Mykolaiv region.

    I also call on all countries – and in particular your countries, dear G-19 leaders – to join our initiative to help the poorest with food.

    We have already launched the initiative – “Grain From Ukraine”. And the first vessel – Nord Vind – leaves for Ethiopia with 27 thousand tons of wheat on board. This is the amount that can feed almost 100,000 people per year. There can be many such ships from Ukraine, and therefore there will be many people in poor countries who are saved from starvation.

    Ukraine can export 45 million tons of food this year. And let a significant part of it be directed to those who suffer the most.

    What do we propose exactly? Each country can join with a specific contribution and become a co-creator of the victory over hunger and the food crisis.

    The third is energy security.

    All of you can witness what the Russian terror is aimed at now. This is an attempt to turn the cold into a weapon. A weapon against millions of people.

    About 40% of our energy infrastructure were destroyed by the strikes of Russian missiles and Iranian drones used by the occupiers. Every week, Russia blows up our power plants, transformers, and electricity supply lines.

    A related goal of this terror is to prevent the export of our electricity to neighbouring countries, which could significantly help them stabilize the energy situation and reduce prices for consumers.

    Russia is interested in the energy crisis. And we should all be interested in ending terror.

    I thank all our partners who have already helped Ukraine with the supply of air defence and missile defence systems. This allows us to shoot down some of the Russian missiles and Iranian drones. But we must fully protect our sky. I ask you to increase respective assistance!

    We have already proposed that a mission of UN experts is sent to the objects of critical energy infrastructure of Ukraine to assess the scope of damage and the needs for restoration, as well as to prevent their further destruction. We need to speed up the dispatch of this mission!

    This will be a specific contribution of the international community to the stabilization of the energy situation in Ukraine and Europe, and therefore in the global energy market.

    However, regardless of the decisions of the world, any day Russia on its own can simply abandon strikes on Ukrainian energy generation and water and heat supply facilities. Let Russia prove by its rejection of terror that it is really interested in the restoration of peace.

    We must also take a fundamental step so that energy resources are no longer used as weapons. Price restrictions on Russian energy resources should be introduced.

    If Russia is trying to deprive Ukraine, Europe and all energy consumers in the world of predictability and price stability, the answer to this should be a forced limitation of export prices for Russia. So that the export price was not higher than the production cost. That’s fair. If you take something away, the world has the right to take from you.

    The fourth challenge is the release of all prisoners and deportees.

    Thousands of our people – military and civilians – are in the Russian captivity. They are subjected to brutal torture – this is mass abuse!

    In addition, we know by name 11 thousand children who were forcibly deported to Russia. They are separated from their parents in full knowledge that they have families.

    Apart from the children, whose data we know, there are tens of thousands of those who were forcibly deported and about whom we know only indirectly. Among them are many, whose parents were killed by Russian strikes, and now they are being held in the state that murdered them.

    Add to that hundreds of thousands of deported adults, and you will see what a humanitarian catastrophe the Russian war has caused.

    Add political prisoners – Ukrainian citizens who are held in Russia and in the temporarily occupied territory, in particular in Crimea.

    We must release all these people!

    I want to point out that we did not find support from the International Committee of the Red Cross. We do not see that they are fully fighting to gain access to the camps, where Ukrainian prisoners of war and political prisoners are held. Neither they are helping to find deported Ukrainians. This self-withdrawal is the self-destruction of the Red Cross as an organization that was once respected.

    We cannot wait.

    Therefore, we must unite for the sake of the only realistic model of the release of prisoners – “all for all”.

    And also for the release of all children and adults who were deported to Russia.

    I thank the partners for their efforts, which allowed the release of many Ukrainians and foreign citizens, who were captured by the Russians. And let your leadership and the sincere heart of other leaders, who are present now, help free other Ukrainians as well.

    The fifth – implementation of the UN Charter and restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and the world order.

    Article 2 of the UN Charter defines everything very clearly. Everything that Russia violated by this war.

    Therefore, we must restore the validity of international law – and without any compromises with the aggressor. Because the UN Charter cannot be applied partially, selectively or “at will”.

    Russia must reaffirm the territorial integrity of Ukraine within the framework of the relevant resolutions of the UN General Assembly and the applicable international legally binding documents.

    It is not up to negotiations.

    The sixth challenge is withdrawal of Russian troops and cessation of hostilities.

    There is a clear understanding of how to achieve this.

    Russia must withdraw all its troops and armed formations from the territory of Ukraine. Ukraine’s control over all sections of our state border with Russia must be restored.

    This will result in a real and complete cessation of hostilities.

    Every day of delay means new deaths of Ukrainians, new threats to the world, and an insane increase in losses due to continuation of the Russian aggression – losses for everyone in the world.

    The seventh – justice.

    This is what stokes the greatest emotions.

    Everywhere, when we liberate our land, we see one thing – Russia leaves behind torture chambers and mass burials of murdered people.

    This was the case in Bucha and other cities in the north of the country after the occupation. This was the case in the Kharkiv region. The same we observe now in the Kherson region.

    As of today, we have a full information about four hundred and thirty children killed by Russian strikes. Only children! And only those about whom we know everything for sure.

    And how many mass graves are there in the territory that still remains under the control of Russia? What will we see in Mariupol?

    That is why the world should endorse establishment of the Special Tribunal regarding the crime of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine and the creation of an international mechanism to compensate for all the damages caused by this war. Compensation at the expense of Russian assets, because it is the aggressor who must do everything to restore the justice violated by it.

    We have already proposed a resolution of the UN General Assembly regarding an international compensation mechanism for damages caused by the Russian war. It is endorsed. We ask you to implement it.

    We are also preparing the second resolution – on the Special Tribunal. Please join and support it.

    Because there is no such nation in the world that does not appreciate justice.

    The eighth challenge is ecocide, the need for immediate protection of environment.

    Millions of hectares of forest were burned by shelling. Almost two hundred thousand hectares of our land are contaminated with unexploded mines and shells. Dozens of coal mines are flooded, including the mine in which an underground nuclear test explosion was carried out in 1979…

    This is the “Yunkom” mine in the Donetsk region. It is located on the territory occupied by Russia. It has been flooded for several years – precisely because of the occupiers. Everyone in Moscow knows what a threat it poses not only to the rivers in the Donetsk region, but also to the Black Sea basin. Only the de-occupation of our territory can provide the conditions for the elimination of this threat.

    It is impossible to accurately calculate the amount of atmospheric pollution from burnt oil depots and other fires… As well as from blown up sewage facilities, burned chemical plants, innumerable burial sites of slayed animals.

    Just imagine this – due to the Russian aggression, 6 million domestic animals died. 6 million! These are official numbers. At least 50,000 dolphins were killed in the Black Sea. Thousands of hectares of soil are contaminated with harmful substances – most of them are fertile soils. Were fertile soils.

    During the last week’s Climate Summit in Egypt, I proposed a platform to assess the environmental damage of war. We have to implement it.

    We must also find common responses to all environmental threats created by the war. Without this, there will be no return to a normal, stable life, and the reverberations of the war will remain for a long time – in the explosions of mines that will take the lives of children and adults, in the pollution of water, soil and atmosphere.

    I thank all the countries that are already helping us with demining. There is an urgent need for an increased number of equipment and experts for these operations.

    Funds and technologies are also needed for the restoration of water treatment facilities.

    This is not just a Ukrainian problem. This is a challenge for the whole world.

    The next – the ninth – is the prevention of escalation.

    A risk that still exists and will remain until our security is properly ensured.

    Ukraine is not a member of any of the alliances. And Russia was able to start this war precisely because Ukraine remained in the grey zone – between the Euro-Atlantic world and the Russian imperialism. Now we do not have any security assurances either. So, how can we prevent repetition of Russia’s such aggression against us?

    We need effective security assurances. That is why we prepared a draft agreement – the Kyiv Security Compact, and have already presented it to partners.

    Thus, we should hold an international conference to cement the key elements of the post-war security architecture in the Euro-Atlantic space, including guarantees for Ukraine.

    The main outcome of the conference should be the signing of the Kyiv Security Compact.

    We can do it any time – even this year. And we must do it.

    And the tenth – confirmation of the end of the war.

    When all the antiwar measures are implemented, when security and justice begin to be restored, a document confirming the end of the war should be signed by the parties.

    I would like to emphasize that none of the steps above can take long. A month for one step at the most. For some steps, a couple of days are enough.

    We already have a positive experience with the grain export initiative. How does it work?

    There is the UN – and two other parties to the agreements: on one side Ukraine, Türkiye and the UN, and on the other side Russia, Türkiye and the UN.

    Implementation of each of the points I have just presented can be worked out in a similar fashion. States ready to take the lead in this or that decision can become parties to the arrangement.

    Once again:

    radiation and nuclear safety; food security; energy security; release of all prisoners and deported persons; implementation of the UN Charter and restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and the world order; withdrawal of Russian troops and cessation of hostilities; restoration of justice; countering ecocide; preventing escalation; and finally – confirmation of the end of the war.

    Dear leaders!

    I have outlined the paths each of you can choose for yourself – how to become a co-creator of peace.

    Please choose your path for leadership – and together we will surely implement the peace formula.

    What will it do?

    It will save thousands of lives. It will restore the validity of international law. It will revitalize the security architecture. It will return the global stability, without which the whole world is suffering. In essence – this is what the honest countries of the world are cooperating for.

    Peace is a global value. That, which is important for every person in the world.

    I am confident that it is likewise for each of you, leaders of G-19.

    I have outlined specific, practical solutions. They can be implemented. Quickly. They are effective.

    And if Russia opposes our peace formula, you will see that it only wants war.

    Ukraine is grateful to everyone in the world who helps us to protect freedom and to restore peace.

    Let our joint efforts be crowned with success as soon as possible and be reflected in the outcomes of this summit.

    Thank you for the invitation!

    Glory to Ukraine!

  • PRESS RELEASE : Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a meeting on stabilization measures in the de-occupied Kherson region [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a meeting on stabilization measures in the de-occupied Kherson region [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the President of Ukraine on 14 November 2022.

    As part of a working trip to the Kherson and Mykolaiv regions, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a meeting on stabilization measures in the de-occupied territory of the Kherson region.

    The Head of State listened to the report of the commander of the Kherson operational-strategic group of troops, Brigadier General Oleksandr Tarnavskyi about the situation in the region.

    Head of the Kherson regional military administration Yaroslav Yanushevych informed the President about the state of the city’s critical infrastructure and life support systems.

    70-80 thousand people currently live in Kherson. The city has a difficult situation with electricity supply and communication.

    “Everything will return. Yes, unfortunately, the occupiers, who destroy everything on their path, destroyed the entire power supply network. But our services are working, and everything will return,” the President emphasized.

    As Volodymyr Zelenskyy noted, points of assistance to residents will gradually appear in the city, as was the case in the Kharkiv region.

    For his part, Yaroslav Yanushevych noted that, on the instructions of the Head of State, measures are being taken to restore the destroyed power transmission lines going to the Kherson region.

    “We are working on this issue round the clock together with Ukrenergo. Our electricians are moving right behind the explosives technicians. And we hope that the electricity supply will be restored in the near future,” he said.

    The participants of the meeting discussed the provision of assistance by neighboring regions, in particular Mykolaiv and Dnipropetrovsk regions, in the establishment of logistics and the return of normal life to the liberated territories of the Kherson region.

    In Mykolaiv, Volodymyr Zelenskyy also visited the humanitarian headquarters that operates under the RMA and has been providing assistance to people in need since the first days of full-scale Russian aggression.

    Thus, over 4 million tons of humanitarian aid was distributed among the communities of the region in 9 months. The population is regularly supplied with food and non-food kits, warm clothes, medicines and building materials for repairing houses damaged by shelling.

    The humanitarian headquarters has already sent aid to Kherson, which was recently liberated from the Russian occupiers. This includes, in particular, more than 25 tons of food kits, 26 pallets of food products, and 3 tons of hygiene products. Also, an ambulance, more than 6 tons of medicines, including insulin and other critical medicines, as well as medical supplies that were purchased for the Kherson region and stored in Mykolaiv until de-occupation were transferred from the Mykolaiv region to Kherson.

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech on the Implementation of the EU Solidarity Lanes Initiative

    Volodymyr Zelenskyy – 2022 Speech on the Implementation of the EU Solidarity Lanes Initiative

    The speech made by Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the President of Ukraine, on 11 November 2022.

    President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered a video message on the implementation of the EU Solidarity Lanes Initiative.

    This initiative was launched on May 12, 2022. Its purpose is to promote the establishment and improvement of alternative routes for the export of Ukrainian agricultural products given the blockade of the Black Sea ports, as well as to ensure the possibility of importing necessary goods to Ukraine.

    The initiative envisages the implementation of a set of measures to eliminate transport delays at the borders of Ukraine with the states of the European Union, improving road, rail and river connections between our country and the EU in the future.

    Today, the European Commission together with the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development announced the allocation of additional 850 million euros in the framework of the initiative, and the World Bank – 100 million euros to support Ukrainian exports, in particular through the implementation of targeted joint projects.

    In his address, Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked the entire united Europe for the constant support that Ukraine has been receiving since the first hours of the Russian invasion.

    “Please, know that your defense assistance, as well as financial, political and humanitarian support, saved millions of lives. This is the solidarity that clearly demonstrates the strength of the European values. When Europe is truly united, not a single tyranny can take the freedom of the Europeans away,” the President emphasized.

    The Head of State noted that by starting the full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia blocked Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, and a bigger part of Ukrainian export and import stopped.

    “But we were able to open a new way of economic life through the territory of the European Union. Along this road of life, we established a supply that is critically important not only for Ukraine but also for the whole Europe and many other countries – partners of Europe,” he said.

    “On the eve of the half-year anniversary of the Solidarity Lanes Initiative, I confirm our readiness to continue working together with you in order to further strengthen our Europe. Strengthen economically and socially. To strengthen our states, our companies, our people,” the President of Ukraine added.

    The video address of the Head of State together with the speeches of President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and the leaders of neighboring countries was broadcast by Europe by Satellite, the main television resource of the institutions of the European Union, and other EU information channels.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Securing peace, stability and prosperity for Libya [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Securing peace, stability and prosperity for Libya [November 2022]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 15 November 2022.

    Thank you President, and I would like to thank SRSG Bathily for taking time away from his important engagement with Libyan stakeholders to brief the Council today. I welcome your continued engagement with all Libyan stakeholders, including women and youth, across the country.

    Let me once again express the United Kingdom’s support for SRSG Bathily and his efforts to reinvigorate Libya’s stalled peace process. Stability in Libya can only be achieved through a UN-facilitated, Libyan-led and owned process that leads to Parliamentary and Presidential elections as soon as possible. All Libyan parties have an obligation to work with SRSG Bathily to achieve this and deliver elections for the Libyan people.

    We are concerned by reports that armed groups prevented a meeting of the High State Council in Tripoli yesterday. Any attempt to obstruct civilian institutions from carrying out their responsibilities is unacceptable.

    President, the United Kingdom reaffirms our commitment to working with Libya and our international partners to secure peace, stability and prosperity for Libya. The unanimous adoption of the 12-month UNSMIL mandate renewal was a welcome demonstration of the Council’s support, and I look forward to engaging with SRSG Bathily again during the mandated Council meeting next month.

    And I thank you.

  • Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 on Delivering on Ambitious Climate Commitments

    Alok Sharma – 2022 Speech at COP27 on Delivering on Ambitious Climate Commitments

    The speech made by Alok Sharma, the COP26 President, on 15 November 2022.

    Thank you Minister Samuda for your kind words and actually for a great explanation of what this partnership has achieved and continues to achieve.

    And it is remarkable.

    We’ve got 200 members, 120 countries – developing countries, developed countries – and 80 institutions, all working together.

    This is a unique platform and it’s about coordinating between donors and developing nations, ensuring they support the implementation of NDCs [Nationally Determined Contributions] across the world.

    Now from a UK perspective, we’ve been proud and honoured to co-chair with our friends and we’ve also put money behind this process. We’ve committed £27 million in core funding from 2019 to 2025.

    If I look back a year from now, we had almost 200 countries that came together and forged the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    And I was very proud of that. I was very proud of everyone who helped to deliver that.

    The Minister talked about the impact of climate change around the world.

    But it is the case that the chronic threat of climate change is getting worse.

    And that’s why countries came together at COP26, because they understood it was in their common self-interest to act and to deliver on the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    And one of the key elements of that was the ratchet.

    So, we went from NDCs coming forward every five years, to every country signing up to revise their NDC, to align it with the Paris temperature goal by the end of this year.

    Now we’ve had 33 countries that have come forward so far.

    We need more.

    It was a commitment we’ve all made and we need to deliver on it.

    And actually, if you look at the NDCs – that were delivered going into COP26 and those that have come forward since – and if you take into account the net zero commitments we’ve already got from countries around the world, particularly the G20, 19 of the G20 have committed to net zero.

    If you take all of that into account, what the IEA [International Energy Agency] and UNEP [United Nations Environment Programme] tell you is that we could be heading towards 1.7°C of global warming by the end of the century.

    It’s not 1.5 friends, it is not 1.5.

    But it is progress.

    And if you’re going to make this progress, you have to deliver on your NDCs and on your detailed commitments as well.

    That requires financial support, it requires capacity building in certain nations.

    That’s why we should be really proud that this partnership has supported 64 countries to raise ambition and to improve the quality of their NDCs.

    More than £1.4 billion in technical assistance has been provided.

    Minister Samuda has eloquently outlined a lot of the other things the partnership has done – the need for more finance, the need to double adaptation finance from developed nations that we agreed in Glasgow as well.

    This partnership has gone further. It’s about championing easier access to finance and much more transparency as well.

    We’ve got the new online hub that has been put forward. That will help as part of this process.

    What I would say to you all is that we can’t lose sight of why we are doing this.

    Yes, this is about cleaning up our environment. Yes, this is about delivering a better future for generations to come.

    But it is also about economic growth.

    This is about millions of new green jobs. It’s about billions, trillions of private sector investment flowing into the sunrise industries of today and tomorrow.

    That’s why the work that we do collectively is so vital.

    And I just want to end, friends, by saying that I think it is absolutely vital that we keep 1.5 alive.

    We cannot lose 1.5 at this COP.

    We can’t afford to go backwards.

    We cannot accept a weak outcome coming out of COP27.

    And I hope you’ll join us in making sure that we have ambition.

    Because what I want to see coming out of this COP is progress.

    Progress and building on the ambition that almost 200 countries delivered together in forging the Glasgow Climate Pact.

    So please join us in calling for more ambition at this COP.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak meeting with HRH Prince Mohammed bin Salman [November 2022]

    PRESS RELEASE : Rishi Sunak meeting with HRH Prince Mohammed bin Salman [November 2022]

    The press release issued by 10 Downing Street on 15 November 2022.

    The Prime Minister met His Royal Highness Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia at the G20 Summit today.

    They discussed the importance of continued UK-Saudi cooperation in the face of regional security threats and international economic instability.

    In light of the global increase in energy prices sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Prime Minister said he hoped the UK and Saudi Arabia could continue to work together to stabilise energy markets.

    The leaders also shared their concern over threats to peace and security in the Middle East, including Iran’s destabilising activity in the region.

    The Prime Minister welcomed the strong trade relations and defence and security collaboration between our two countries, and the leaders committed to look for opportunities to deepen investment ties in strategic industries.

    The Prime Minister looked forward to continuing to strengthen the UK-Saudi relationship, noting the importance of further progress on social reforms, including on women’s rights and freedoms in the Kingdom.