Canada’s Carney meets Zelenskyy, backs security guarantees for Ukraine

Canada’s Carney meets Zelenskyy, backs security guarantees for Ukraine

In line with any peace agreement with Russia, including the possibility of sending troops to the Eastern European nation, Canada’s prime minister Mark Carney has backed Ukraine’s demands for security guarantees.

A group of Ukraine’s Western allies, known as the Coalition of the Willing, are working with the United States to strengthen Ukraine’s defenses during a visit to Kyiv on Sunday, where he met with Volodymyr Zelenskyyy president of Ukraine.

According to Carney, “in Canada’s opinion, the strength of the Ukrainian Armed Forces is not the only security guarantee that needs to be buttressed and reinforced.”

“We are working through the arrangements for those security guarantees on land, in the air, and the sea with our allies in the Coalition of the Willing,” said the president, “and I would not exclude the deployment of troops.”

US President Donald Trump is leading efforts to put an end to the conflict that has taken place three and a half years after Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

For its part, Trump has also expressed his openness toward, and Kyiv is working with its European allies to secure post-war guarantees to shield Ukraine from potential new Russian attacks.

Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, and Carney and Zelenskyyyyy, both attended a ceremony on Sunday to honor Ukrainian independence day in central Kyiv.

Zelenskyy addressed a gathering of dignitaries, “We are all working to ensure that the end of this war will mean the guarantee of peace for Ukraine.”

The Ukrainian president stated that he wants any future security guarantees to be as close as possible to NATO’s Article 5, which states that attacking one member state is an attack against all.

A collaboration agreement was signed between Zelenskyy and Carney. According to the Canadian prime minister, a previously announced package will provide more than $1 billion in military aid to Ukraine next month.

During his visit, Carney also demanded that the conflict in Ukraine be ended.

We require a stop to hostilities. A ceasefire is necessary. It can be referred to as an armistice, a truce, or a ceasefire. That must be done in order to put an end to the murder, Carney told reporters.

As Kyiv and Moscow continue to exchange fire, hopes for a ceasefire on the ground are still tepid despite the already-caused deaths of tens of thousands of lives.

Russia claimed on Sunday that Ukraine had sprayed a drone over Kursk, a nuclear power plant close to the Ukrainian border, igniting a fire there.

Meanwhile, local authorities in Dnipropetrovsk, in the eastern region, reported the death of a 47-year-old woman as a result of a Russian drone strike.

After Trump attempted to arrange a summit between Ukraine and Russia, Russia on Friday ruled out any imminent meeting between Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

However, Zelenskyy reiterated calls for a bilateral summit with Putin on Sunday, saying that the “format of talks between leaders is the most effective way forward.”

Trump and the Russian president met earlier this month in Anchorage, Alaska, but the talks did not lead to a resolution.

Sergey Lavrov, the foreign minister of Russia, accused European leaders on Sunday of undermining efforts to resolve the conflict diplomatically.

Source: Aljazeera

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