An invasion of Ukraine can still be avoided, says Simon Coveney

ireland
An Invasion Of Ukraine Can Still Be Avoided, Says Simon Coveney
Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney said the two diplomats at the Irish embassy in Kiev would remain there. Photo: PA Images
Share this article

Vivienne Clarke

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney has said that he believes that an invasion of Ukraine can still be avoided.

War and an invasion were not inevitable, he told Newstalk Breakfast. Both could be avoided through “intense diplomacy.”

Advertisement

While the warnings from the UK and the US could not be ignored, it was important not to “over-heat” the situation, he said.

“There are real efforts to prevent a military invasion of Ukraine, and I think we should be doubling down on those efforts - rather than creating some kind of self-fulfilling prophecy here.

“I believe that, certainly from all the different sources that we're speaking to, an invasion can still be avoided - and I think that should be the focus now.”

Should Russia invade Ukraine then any response from the EU would have to be “very significant” in the form of sanctions.

Advertisement

That would mean significant economic impact on the EU as well “in terms of the potential impact on financial services, on energy prices, on the ability to travel and do business and trade.

“So nobody escapes here, which is why the last thing we want is to have to trigger a package of sanctions like that, and of course for Russia to respond in kind.”

Complex

Mr Coveney also said the two diplomats at the Irish embassy in Kiev would remain there.

"Over the weekend I spoke at length to our ambassador there, she believes she should be staying, and I agree with her.

Advertisement

“Virtually every country is keeping at least a skeleton diplomatic staff in their embassy in Kiev, and we're doing the same. We will keep a diplomatic presence there as long as it is safe”.

One of the reasons why Ukraine was complex from a consular perspective was the number of Irish families involved in surrogacy in the Ukraine, said Mr Coveney.

“We need to manage those cases as sensitively and as carefully as we can - and that's one of the important roles of our diplomatic staff in Kiev at the moment”.

Later on RTÉ radio’s Today with Claire Byrne show, surrogacy legal expert Annette Hickey called on the Department of Foreign Affairs to expedite the Emergency Travel Cert system for couples arriving back into Ireland with a baby born through surrogacy in Ukraine.

Advertisement

At present the process can take up to four weeks, and it should be shortened in the circumstances, she urged.

Whatever can be done to expedite the process should be done, she added. These were unprecedented times, there was no blueprint for what was happening.

The Government should do whatever it could “to get these babies home.”

On the same programme, Minister of State for European Affairs Thomas Byrne urged any Irish in Ukraine to come home if they could. Exceptional efforts were being made to bring a diplomatic solution to the situation in Ukraine.

The objective was to prevent war breaking out and keeping the peace, he said.

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com