- BC-CNS-Ukraine Consul in Arizona, 590 words.
- 5 photos and captions below.
By Eryka Forquer
Cronkite News
PHOENIX – Six weeks after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine, the consul general of Ukraine in San Francisco urged Arizona lawmakers on Thursday to provide greater assistance to Ukraine and its people during a special joint session of the Legislature.
Dmytro Kushneruk said Russia has inflicted a “crime against humanity” and the Ukrainian people since it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.
“Those who were lucky to stay alive detail horrible stories of awful terrorism and suffering,” said Kushneruk, who was appointed consul general in 2020. “Huge numbers of evidences of rapes, tortures and murders of civilian people by the Russian armed forces.”
And as Russian troops regroup to focus on eastern Ukraine, Kushneruk said, reinforcements from the West are crucial to prevent further loss of civilian lives.
“We say right now that Ukraine needs three things, and these three things are weapons, weapons and weapons,” he told the legislators.
That includes airplanes, heavy artillery, tanks and armored vehicles, as well as long-range missiles needed to destroy Russian ships obliterating Mariupol and other southern cities.
According to the U.N. Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner, as of Wednesday, 1,611 civilians have been killed and 2,227 have been injured in Ukraine.
Kushneruk noted that Ukrainian authorities have begun discovering mass graves of civilians in places that were under Russian occupation.
“Something like this seems impossible in the 21st century in the heart of Europe, but unfortunately it isn’t,” he said. “This is the crime against humanity.”
Kushneruk said suspending Russia’s membership on the U.N. Human Rights Council, which the General Assembly voted to do Thursday, is not enough. He believes Russia should be expelled from the U.N. Security Council because it “has no right to be there and block the resolutions” addressing the invasion.
The Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs already has collected 9,000 pounds of equipment and supplies for fighters of Ukraine. The equipment, which was donated by local, county, state and tribal law enforcement agencies, includes 874 bulletproof vests and 77 helmets, as well as footwear, tactical clothing, pads and shields.
“Arizona stands with Ukraine,” Gov. Doug Ducey said in a March 31 news release. “Everyday citizens are risking their lives, fighting for their freedom, and deserve all the assistance we can give them.”
Rep. Thomas “T.J.” Shope, R-Coolidge, said it is important for people to hear about the events of the war in real time to remind themselves that this is occurring. He also said that people in Arizona need to do what they can to help.
“Should Ukraine fall, it will not end with Ukraine,” Shope said. “We should do what we can to ensure that empires are a thing of the 18th, 19th and 20th century, and that they stay behind in the 21st.”
Ukrainian fighters have repulsed the Russians in northern and western Ukraine but intense fighting continues in the south and east. Kushernuk told the lawmakers that efforts need to shift from helping Ukraine to survive to empowering Ukraine to win.
“The opportunity to act is now when Ukraine has the momentum, when the Russian forces are losing, when they’re regrouping and before they inflict even more damage to our civilians,” he said.
He asked for assistance for Ukraine by all means, whether that be through humanitarian efforts, financial support or help with refugees.
“I will quote one of the leaders of the European Parliament in saying the following words: ‘If freedom has a name today, its name is Ukraine. The Ukrainian flag is the flag of freedom.’”
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