Daria Herasymchuk, Advisor – Presidential Commissioner for Children’s Rights and Child Rehabilitation, took part in the high-level event “Gross Human .....
President Biden's administration prepared a new large-scale economic, energy, and security assistance package for Ukraine, as well as additional sweeping sanctions against Russia and those who help it continue its aggression against Ukraine.
On the first anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Australian government has announced a new package of military aid to Ukraine and introduced fresh sanctions against Russia.
Over the first two months of 2023, Russia has spent almost half of its annual defense budget so, in order to continue the war against Ukraine, will be forced to cut funding for social programs, which is seen as an undesirable step on the eve of the 2024 elections.
Twenty-five countries have already joined the Coordination Group, which is working on establishing a special tribunal for Russia’s crimes of aggression.
The Council of Europe condemns Russia’s aggression and reaffirms unwavering commitment to supporting Ukraine, its independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity within the internationally recognized borders, stressing the fact that no lasting peace is possible unless justice is served.
Russia is the biggest threat to the security of the Bucharest Nine countries, so the B9 countries will do everything possible to strengthen NATO's military presence on the eastern flank of the military alliance.
The decision to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine has become a strategic disaster for Russia, but the Kremlin still refuses to admit it and continues the war, sparing no human lives.
Russia is preparing a scenario of internal destabilization in Ukraine as the only way out of own military defeat. To this end, on international platforms and in Ukraine, the Russian Federation, through its "experts", is promoting the idea of Ukraine giving up the territories of Crimea, as well as Donetsk and Luhansk regions, in exchange for an end to the war.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania, Gabrielius Landsbergis, commented on the latest statement by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who once again accused the West of the war that Russia is waging against Ukraine.