Tag: Olena Zelenska

  • Ukraine will suffer if US help is discontinued – Olena Zelenska

    Ukraine will suffer if US help is discontinued – Olena Zelenska

    Without important help from the US military, there is a big risk that Ukraine could eventually lose the war, even if not right away.

    President Zelensky is in Washington to ask Congress to approve a $60 billion aid package. It’s been delayed because of a disagreement over US border security. He hopes to convince them to pass it.

    On Sunday, the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, said that Ukraine is in serious danger and needs ongoing help from America to survive.

    Western authorities told the BBC that they believe the US government will find a solution to the current problem. President Biden may achieve his goals, but people will still have concerns about the position of the US. During a year when a president is chosen, things will be even more unpredictable.

    America has given the most military help to Ukraine, not Europe.

    Europe is on its way to giving more economic help to Ukraine than the US. The US has a strong military support lead.

    The Kiel Institute keeps track of how much support countries give. They say the US has given €44bn of military equipment. Germany, the biggest giver in Europe, has given €18 billion.

    The US has been very important in helping Ukraine in its war and has also been the main organizer of that help.

    Jack Watling from the Royal United Services Institute says it plainly: “Europe can’t replace what the US was giving. ”

    He thinks Europe missed the chance to make more weapons and equipment in the last two years.

    “He says there isn’t enough manufacturing capacity because European countries haven’t invested properly. ”

    For instance, Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius said that the European Union won’t be able to give Ukraine one million artillery shells by next March. Actually, it will only send Ukraine less than half of what it said it would. At this time, Ukraine needs at least 2. 4 million artillery shells each year to keep fighting in the war.

    Most of the countries in Europe that are part of Nato still don’t spend the 2% of their national income on defense, as they were supposed to do nearly ten years ago.

    This week, UK’s Defense Secretary Grant Shapps said that Europe needs to do more. He mentioned that aside from Ukraine, we can’t keep relying on the US to always help Europe.

    Russia’s economy during a time of war

    Compare how Europe reacted to Russia’s actions.

    Russia has already changed its economy to focus on preparing for war. Western officials believe that almost 40% of Russia’s money will be spent on defense and security next year. This is more than what they will spend on health and education combined.

    One year ago, Russia got around 40 Shahed attack drones from Iran. Now they think they are making about 300 each month.

    By the end of 2022, Russia could only make about 40 big missiles every month. Now it is expected to be earning one hundred, even with sanctions from western countries.

    It has increased how many artillery shells it makes, and got more from North Korea when its supply was running out.

    However, Russia is still having a hard time replacing the equipment and people it has lost. Western officials think that Russia had around a thousand soldiers getting hurt or killed every day during November, just in their attack on Avdiivka in eastern Ukraine.

    Tiredness from fighting in a war

    A year ago, people in the West were hopeful because of the early successes of a Ukrainian counter attack. But now, that hope has mostly gone away.

    Ukraine’s summer attack did not go as planned. It didn’t achieve its goal of breaking through Russia’s main defenses in the south.

    Mr Watling thinks that the war will last a long time and that it will make people tired and change how they think about taking risks.

    The Kiel Institute reported that the amount of new aid promised to Ukraine from August to October this year was the lowest it has been since January 2022. Out of 42 countries that give aid, only 20 have promised to give new aid packages during this time – which is almost 90% less than last year.

    Most of the people who support Ukraine, at least when they say in public, say they are still determined.

    However, some countries are having trouble providing as much military aid as before because they have used up a lot of their own supplies.

    We don’t know yet how much help Ukraine will get from the Netherlands in the future, after Geert Wilders’ right-wing party did well in the election. The Dutch have been an important part of the group that said they would give Ukraine F-16 jets.

    The effect on future activities.

    These questions about future aid supplies won’t have a quick effect on the battlefield.

    One person in charge of the western side says it is unlikely that there will be any big progress from either side in the next few months. Russia and Ukraine are focused on defending themselves and using a lot of resources for attacking.

    However, Ukraine may have to limit the amount of ammunition they use in the next few months. This could weaken their military forces even more.

    Jake Sullivan, who works for the White House, told the New York Times that Ukraine’s ability to defend its airspace could be affected. He said that the US can’t send air defense systems to Ukraine anymore.

    That alarm is being given because Russia is expected to start attacking important buildings and systems in Ukraine more often in the next few weeks.

    Not being clear about getting help from the US military could cause another problem. Watling just got back from Ukraine, and he says that the uncertainty about aid is already making it hard for Ukraine to make plans.

    He says the current problem in the US Congress is making it hard for Ukraine to figure out its next moves in battle and to get more support from the west.

  • Ukraine in ‘mortal danger’ if assistance not given – Olena Zelenska

    Ukraine in ‘mortal danger’ if assistance not given – Olena Zelenska

    Olena Zelenska said that Ukrainians could die if western countries don’t keep giving them money.

    The wife of Ukraine’s president talked to a reporter on Sunday after US Republican senators stopped an important aid bill.

    It would have given Ukraine more than $60 billion in help.

    She said that if the world gets tired, they will just let us die after the Russian missile attack.

    The White House says it’s running out of money to help Ukraine, but the Republican party is stopping a deal to provide more aid.

    They want to make a deal with President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress about money for border security in exchange for their help.

    President Biden said that if we don’t help Ukraine, it would be good for President Putin. He warned that people who don’t support freedom will be judged badly by history.

    Almost two years after Russia invaded Ukraine without permission, the first lady is very worried about the slow process of getting money for help.

    In a special interview airing on Sunday, Olena Zelenska told the media that the decrease in help is very dangerous for her country.

    She said, “We really need help. ” In other words, we can’t afford to get tired of this situation, because if we do, we will die.

    “If the world gets too tired, it will just let us die. ”

    The first lady said, “It makes us very sad to see that people may not want to help as much as before. ”

    “It is very important to us. ” So, it really hurts to see that.

    The UK is asking politicians in Washington DC to make a deal for Ukraine.

    This week, UK Foreign Secretary Lord Cameron visited Washington and said that the US is very important in supporting Ukraine’s fight against Russia.

    He told the US not to give Mr Putin a “Christmas present” by stopping the billions of dollars of money needed to keep fighting against Russian forces.

    There is no doubt that other countries are now thinking differently about Ukraine.

    In Washington DC, strong support cannot be promised, but the main issues of the conflict have not changed.

    A country in Eastern Europe is still fighting against Russian forces after they invaded illegally.

    Ukraine’s military stopped another country from taking over in February 2022 and this surprised everyone.

    Many Western countries were surprised by the strong support they received in return.

    However, Ukraine needs support and help from other countries to continue on the same path.

    The first lady’s warnings are meant to make it very clear.

  • ‘I need my husband by my side’ – Ukraine’s First Lady laments impact of Russian invasion

    ‘I need my husband by my side’ – Ukraine’s First Lady laments impact of Russian invasion

    Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, has shared deeply personal insights in an interview with the BBC, shedding light on the profound emotional toll that the war has inflicted on her family.

    “This may be a bit selfish, but I need my husband, not a historical figure, by my side,” she said.

    She also mentioned the family’s longing to spend quality time together.

    “But we stay strong, we have strength both emotionally and physically. And I am sure we will handle it together,” she added.

    In February 2022, when Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, along with her children, endured months of seclusion in undisclosed safe havens.

    She recounted her initial emotional state during the invasion as being marked by “a continuous rush of adrenaline.” However, as time elapsed, she recognized the importance of finding ways to soothe herself and adapt to “the prevailing circumstances.”

    Emerging from her period of concealment in the previous year, the conflict thrust the former scriptwriter into the international limelight. Since then, she has embarked on global travels, engaging with world leaders and delivering impactful speeches.

    “We don’t live together with my husband, the family is separated.” Olena Zelenska told the BBC, “We have the opportunity to see each other but not as often as we would like. My son misses his father.”

    However the uncertainty of living in war has come at an emotional cost for her children, she said.

    “It pains me to watch that my kids don’t plan anything. At such an age, young people. My daughter is 19. They dream of travelling, of new sensations, emotions. She does not have such an opportunity.

    “There are limitations in time in what you can allow yourself, they exist, and we somehow try to live within them.”

    The first lady and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky were childhood sweethearts who eventually collaborated in a comedy ensemble and a television studio. He pursued an acting career, while she contributed as a scriptwriter.

    Today, she looks back on their journey and acknowledges that she never envisioned her husband evolving into the “historic figure” he has become. She expresses her longing for his presence and the need for him to be by her side as her husband.

    Despite what she said may be a “selfish” longing, Olena Zelenska said the president, “really does have the energy, the will power, inspiration, and stubbornness to go through this war.”

    “I believe in him. And I support him. I know that he has enough strength. For any other person I know, I think, it would be much harder this situation. He really is a very strong and resilient person. And this resilience is what we all need right now.”

    In her current role as the first lady, her primary focus has been on assisting Ukrainians in coping with the psychological repercussions of the ongoing war.

    She is actively preparing to co-host a summit in Kyiv that will center on mental health and resilience. Renowned British actor and writer Stephen Fry, a prominent advocate for mental health causes, will join her as the co-host of this important event.

    “I really hope that I can inspire someone, can give someone hope or advice, or prove with my own example that we live, we work, we move forward,” Olena Zelenska said.

    “No one can know what awaits for them. After all, no one could have imagined that in the 21st Century, that such a war would be unleashed in the middle of Europe, that it would be so cruel. A bloody war. So, I have never imagined that I would be in this role at this time.”

    Ukrainians cannot be sure about tomorrow or have confidence in the future, she explained – but they have hope.

    “We have huge hope for victory, but we don’t know when it comes. And this long wait, constant stress, it has its toll.”

  • Ukraine’s first lady requests air defence systems from South Korea

    Ukraine’s first lady requests air defence systems from South Korea

    Olena Zelenska, the first lady of Ukraine, requested non-lethal military gear and air defence systems when she met with President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday in Seoul, according to reports in both Koreas.

    Zelenska, a representative of the Ukrainian president who is in the South Korean capital, made a long list of requests, according to Lee Do-woon, the president of South Korea. These included mine detectors, demining tools, and first aid trucks.

    As stated by the Ukraine’s presidential office, Zelenska told Yoon that her country needed help with technologies South Korea “is famous for.”

    “We discussed with the president the need for air defense systems to stop the missile terrorism of the aggressor country,” Zelenska was quoted as saying.

    “We also need the means to clear the traps that Russia has left on our territory and medical equipment to save those who were wounded by the attackers,” she added.

    Since the war broke out in Ukraine, South Korea has maintained its stance of not providing lethal weapons to a warring country, although Yoon has hinted at a possible major policy shift.

    However, during an interview with Reuters in April, the South Korean leader said his country would consider sending lethal aid to Ukraine if there was a large-scale attack on civilians.

    The East Asian country has previously faced calls from NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg to relax its rule on not exporting weapons to countries in conflict, so it could help arm Ukraine.

    During the Tuesday meeting, the Ukrainian first lady also expressed hope that South Korean companies would take part in rebuilding Ukraine, according to the spokesman for Yoon’s office.

    Yoon greeted Zelenska by expressing his condolences to the victims and the Ukrainian people, and told her that South Korea would “actively support Ukraine” in cooperation with NATO countries and the international community.

    Separately, Zelenska met South Korea’s first lady Kim Keon-hee, who praised the “courageous and devotional” efforts her Ukrainian counterpart has made in the midst of a war, the presidential office spokesman said.

    The Ukrainian first lady handed Yoon “a personal letter and an invitation from the president of Ukraine” to visit her country, the Ukrainian side said.

    Zelenska was in the country to take part in the Asian Leadership Conference, accompanied by Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy Yulia Svyrydenko and Deputy Head of the Presidential Office Rostyslav Shurma, according to Ukraine’s presidential office.

    In a speech to the conference Wednesday, Zelenska said “humanitarian aid alone will not save” Ukrainians.

    “Where there is a criminal in your house, who has come to kill your family, humanitarian aid alone will not save the residents,” Zelenska said, referring to Russia’s invasion.

    “The first thing to do is stop the murderer. In the case of Kherson, it could be air defense systems, technologically advanced and effective like everything your country creates and produces.”

    Since the beginning of the war, Zelenska has used her position to raise awareness of the plight suffered by her citizens and maintain diplomatic relations with global leaders.

    Just before her trip to Seoul, she met European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv to discuss the psychological rehabilitation of children in her country.

    Last year, she met US first lady Jill Biden privately at the White House to discuss American support for Ukraine.

  • Victory is not the only thing we need, we need justice – Olena Zelenska

    Ukraine’s First Lady Olena Zelenska has spoken to the UK parliament about the devastating war in her country.

    She said Ukrainians were going through a terror similar to that experienced by the UK in World War Two, when Nazi Germany bombed cities in the blitz

    “Victory is not the only thing we need, we need justice,” Zelenska says, adding she “came came to you for justice, because it will lead to the end of this war”.

    She goes on to say it would have been impossible for the people of bombed British cities to accept those responsible would not recieve justice.

    The Ukrainian people affected by Russia’s attacks deserve that same justice, Zelenska adds.

    Source: BBC

  • Olena Zelenska: We will endure

    Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska tells the BBC that Ukraine will endure this coming winter despite the cold and the blackouts caused by Russian missiles, and will keep fighting what she describes as a war of world views, because “without victory there can be no peace”.

    We meet in a storied city where a winter’s chill is biting, where charming street lamps are dimmed, where buildings are going dark and cold in the midst of blackouts as Russia keeps striking Ukraine’s energy grid. The Ukrainian people have won plaudits for standing their ground against Russia’s blistering assault. But this is yet another painful test of fortitude.

    “We are ready to endure this,” Olena Zelenska asserts when we sit down in a heavily secured compound tucked inside a sandbagged labyrinth of buildings in Kyiv.

    “We’ve had so many terrible challenges, seen so many victims, so much destruction, that blackouts are not the worst thing to happen to us.” She cites a recent poll where 90 % of Ukrainians said they were ready to live with electricity shortages for two to three years if they could see the prospect of joining the European Union.

    That seems like an awfully long cold road, and she knows it.

    “You know, it is easy to run a marathon when you know how many kilometres there are,” she says. In this case, though, Ukrainians don’t know the distance they have to run. “Sometimes it can be very difficult,” she says. “But there are some new emotions that help us to hold on.”

    All Ukrainians will become stronger because of this war, Ukraine’s first lady stoically predicts.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky now lives in his office on Bankova Street (left)
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, President Zelensky now lives at 10 Bankova Street (left), opposite the House of Chimaeras (right)

    Our wide-ranging almost hour-long interview, recorded for the BBC’s annual 100 Women season, takes place in the iconic House of Chimaeras, adorned with elephant-head gargoyles and sculptures of mythical creatures, facing 10 Bankova Street – Ukraine’s version of 10 Downing Street. The building formed the backdrop for President Zelensky’s famous 26 February speech to rally Ukrainians, filmed on his phone two days after Russian tanks rolled across the border. “I’m here. We won’t lay down our arms,” he declared.

    The night before, in one of what became nightly addresses, he had announced in another selfie video that Russia “has designated me as target number one, and my family as target number two”.

    “And so it was from the first day and it continues now,” Olena Zelenska recalls, her words barely hiding the enormous strain that her family, like all Ukrainian families now ripped apart, are going through.

    A few walls of sandbags and circles of security checks away, President Zelensky carries on, around the clock. So close and yet so far. She won’t give an exact date for when they last had dinner together with their children, 18-year-old Oleksandra and nine-year-old Kyrylo. “It’s very rare nowadays. Very rare,” she says.

    “I live separately with my children and my husband lives at work,” she explains. “Most of all, we miss simple things – to sit, not looking at the time, as long as we want.”

    Every Ukrainian’s life has been turned inside out – from engineers to ballerinas now fighting on front lines, to some eight million, mainly women and children, forced to flee into new lives across the border.

    The president and first lady’s lives have long been entwined. High school sweethearts, they went on to work together in a comedy troupe and TV studio, he a comic actor and she, backstage, a scriptwriter. When he ran for president three years ago, she made it clear this wasn’t a life she wanted. But this war has thrust her into the spotlight, on a global stage.

    Olena Zelenska and Volodymyr Zelensky as exit polls came out indicating he had made it to the final round of the 2019 presidential election
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Olena Zelenska advised her husband not to run for president

    After Russia missiles started whistling into Kyiv in the early hours of 24 February, Olena Zelenska spent months in hiding in secret locations with her children. She emerged on 8 May – Mothers’ Day this year in Ukraine, and many other countries – when she joined the US First Lady Jill Biden at a shelter for the displaced in the relatively safe western Ukrainian city of Lviv.

    Now she keeps popping up in speeches on zoom, or at times in person, with her smartly styled hair and classic shirts or jackets, with a shy smile which gives way to strongly worded speeches which come from “a mother, a daughter, a first lady”.

    When the US Congress gave a standing ovation, twice, for a Ukrainian leader in July, it wasn’t President Zelensky at the podium – he hasn’t travelled since Russia invaded – it was his wife. And the first foreign first lady granted the privilege of addressing the US legislature never liked public speaking.

    In an exclusive interview in Kyiv, Ukraine’s first lady talks to the BBC’s Lyse Doucet about the impact of war on mental health, the new roles Ukrainian women are taking on, and what victory would look like.

    “I was scared,” she admits. “But I understood this mission… it was impossible to miss this chance.”

    She emphasised, as she always does, the profound suffering of Ukrainian children, condemning what she called Russia’s “hunger games”. Then, she went much further, asking the US Congress to send weapons.

    Had a first lady, without official powers, crossed a line? “It was not politics, it was what I had to say,” she says. “I asked for weapons, not to attack, but to prevent our children from being killed in their homes.”

    Olena Zelenska (right) with Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House of Representatives, at the US Congress
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Olena Zelenska – pictured with House speaker Nancy Pelosi – never liked public speaking

    The year before these momentous months, Olena Zelenska had already established a Summit of First Ladies and Gentlemen. Now it’s a powerful global network which has helped evacuate Ukrainian children needing cancer treatment and provide opportunities for education. It has arranged access to Ukrainian books in the countries that have welcomed millions of Ukrainian women and children forced to flee – without their husbands, who are barred from leaving in a time of war.

    I ask whether she now senses a certain “fatigue” in other capitals, as this crisis pushes up energy and food prices beyond the borders. “I don’t feel they are tired of us. They all understand that this is not just a war in Ukraine. It is a war of world views.”

    Her prominent role makes her the most visible face of a shattered society where women are taking up new roles everywhere, from fighting on front lines to taking charge as single parents. Check any UN document about Ukrainian society pre-war and it uses language like “patriarchal”, “traditional”, with women’s roles limited by gender.

    Olena Zelenska is adamant that Ukrainian society was changing even before war overwhelmed everything, and that this change is now accelerating. “Kitchen, children, church – this is not for our society any more. A woman who has lived through this will not take a step back.”

    Her newly formed Olena Zelenska Foundation deals with the toughest of challenges including mental health and domestic violence. As much as war can toughen individuals, it can also tear them apart.

    In a reflection of the hardening public view as allegations and evidence of Russian war crimes keep emerging, as entire cities and towns are pummelled to the ground, she insists, “We cannot betray those who are now in occupied territories. We cannot leave people who are waiting for liberation.”

    She hastens to add: “This is not a political position of the president or the government. This is the position of Ukrainians.”

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

    Carefully stepping through this political minefield, the first lady is categorical. “We all understand that without victory, there will be no peace. It would be a false peace and wouldn’t last long.”

    And what does “victory” mean to her?

    She answers without hesitation. “A return to a normal life… sometimes it seems we have put everything on pause.” That includes a different kind of life with her husband. “We’re not just spouses. I can safely say we are best friends,” she says.

    My first question to the first lady had been, “How are you?” She replied that, for all Ukrainians, their answer was, “We are holding on.”

    But, for how long? It’s a question no-one can answer.

    Source: BBC.com 

  • Olena Zelenska: We will endure

    Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska tells the BBC that Ukraine will endure this coming winter despite the cold and the blackouts caused by Russian missiles, and will keep fighting what she describes as a war of world views, because “without victory there can be no peace”.

    We meet in a storied city where a winter’s chill is biting, where charming street lamps are dimmed, where buildings are going dark and cold in the midst of blackouts as Russia keeps striking Ukraine’s energy grid. The Ukrainian people have won plaudits for standing their ground against Russia’s blistering assault. But this is yet another painful test of fortitude.

    “We are ready to endure this,” Olena Zelenska asserts when we sit down in a heavily secured compound tucked inside a sandbagged labyrinth of buildings in Kyiv.

    “We’ve had so many terrible challenges, seen so many victims, so much destruction, that blackouts are not the worst thing to happen to us.” She cites a recent poll where 90 % of Ukrainians said they were ready to live with electricity shortages for two to three years if they could see the prospect of joining the European Union.

    That seems like an awfully long cold road, and she knows it.

    “You know, it is easy to run a marathon when you know how many kilometres there are,” she says. In this case, though, Ukrainians don’t know the distance they have to run. “Sometimes it can be very difficult,” she says. “But there are some new emotions that help us to hold on.”

    All Ukrainians will become stronger because of this war, Ukraine’s first lady stoically predicts.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky now lives in his office on Bankova Street (left)Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption, President Zelensky now lives at 10 Bankova Street (left), opposite the House of Chimaeras (right)

    Our wide-ranging almost hour-long interview, recorded for the BBC’s annual 100 Women season, takes place in the iconic House of Chimaeras, adorned with elephant-head gargoyles and sculptures of mythical creatures, facing 10 Bankova Street – Ukraine’s version of 10 Downing Street. The building formed the backdrop for President Zelensky’s famous 26 February speech to rally Ukrainians, filmed on his phone two days after Russian tanks rolled across the border. “I’m here. We won’t lay down our arms,” he declared.

    The night before, in one of what became nightly addresses, he had announced in another selfie video that Russia “has designated me as target number one, and my family as target number two”.

    “And so it was from the first day and it continues now,” Olena Zelenska recalls, her words barely hiding the enormous strain that her family, like all Ukrainian families now ripped apart, are going through.

    Media caption, Olena Zelenska says her family misses spending time together

    A few walls of sandbags and circles of security checks away, President Zelensky carries on, around the clock. So close and yet so far. She won’t give an exact date for when they last had dinner together with their children, 18-year-old Oleksandra and nine-year-old Kyrylo. “It’s very rare nowadays. Very rare,” she says.

    “I live separately with my children and my husband lives at work,” she explains. “Most of all, we miss simple things – to sit, not looking at the time, as long as we want.”

    Every Ukrainian’s life has been turned inside out – from engineers to ballerinas now fighting on front lines, to some eight million, mainly women and children, forced to flee into new lives across the border.

    The president and first lady’s lives have long been entwined. High school sweethearts, they went on to work together in a comedy troupe and TV studio, he a comic actor and she, backstage, a scriptwriter. When he ran for president three years ago, she made it clear this wasn’t a life she wanted. But this war has thrust her into the spotlight, on a global stage.

    Olena Zelenska and Volodymyr Zelensky as exit polls came out indicating he had made it to the final round of the 2019 presidential electionImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Olena Zelenska advised her husband not to run for president

    After Russia missiles started whistling into Kyiv in the early hours of 24 February, Olena Zelenska spent months in hiding in secret locations with her children. She emerged on 8 May – Mothers’ Day this year in Ukraine, and many other countries – when she joined the US First Lady Jill Biden at a shelter for the displaced in the relatively safe western Ukrainian city of Lviv.

    Now she keeps popping up in speeches on zoom, or at times in person, with her smartly styled hair and classic shirts or jackets, with a shy smile which gives way to strongly worded speeches which come from “a mother, a daughter, a first lady”.

    When the US Congress gave a standing ovation, twice, for a Ukrainian leader in July, it wasn’t President Zelensky at the podium – he hasn’t travelled since Russia invaded – it was his wife. And the first foreign first lady granted the privilege of addressing the US legislature never liked public speaking.

    In an exclusive interview in Kyiv, Ukraine’s first lady talks to the BBC’s Lyse Doucet about the impact of war on mental health, the new roles Ukrainian women are taking on, and what victory would look like.

    “I was scared,” she admits. “But I understood this mission… it was impossible to miss this chance.”

    She emphasised, as she always does, the profound suffering of Ukrainian children, condemning what she called Russia’s “hunger games”. Then, she went much further, asking the US Congress to send weapons.

    Had a first lady, without official powers, crossed a line? “It was not politics, it was what I had to say,” she says. “I asked for weapons, not to attack, but to prevent our children from being killed in their homes.”

    Olena Zelenska (right) with Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House of Representatives, at the US CongressImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Olena Zelenska – pictured with House speaker Nancy Pelosi – never liked public speaking

    The year before these momentous months, Olena Zelenska had already established a Summit of First Ladies and Gentlemen. Now it’s a powerful global network which has helped evacuate Ukrainian children needing cancer treatment and provide opportunities for education. It has arranged access to Ukrainian books in the countries that have welcomed millions of Ukrainian women and children forced to flee – without their husbands, who are barred from leaving in a time of war.

    I ask whether she now senses a certain “fatigue” in other capitals, as this crisis pushes up energy and food prices beyond the borders. “I don’t feel they are tired of us. They all understand that this is not just a war in Ukraine. It is a war of world views.”

    Her prominent role makes her the most visible face of a shattered society where women are taking up new roles everywhere, from fighting on front lines to taking charge as single parents. Check any UN document about Ukrainian society pre-war and it uses language like “patriarchal”, “traditional”, with women’s roles limited by gender.

    Olena Zelenska is adamant that Ukrainian society was changing even before war overwhelmed everything, and that this change is now accelerating. “Kitchen, children, church – this is not for our society any more. A woman who has lived through this will not take a step back.”

    Her newly formed Olena Zelenska Foundation deals with the toughest of challenges including mental health and domestic violence. As much as war can toughen individuals, it can also tear them apart.

    In a reflection of the hardening public view as allegations and evidence of Russian war crimes keep emerging, as entire cities and towns are pummelled to the ground, she insists, “We cannot betray those who are now in occupied territories. We cannot leave people who are waiting for liberation.”

    She hastens to add: “This is not a political position of the president or the government. This is the position of Ukrainians.”

    Carefully stepping through this political minefield, the first lady is categorical. “We all understand that without victory, there will be no peace. It would be a false peace and wouldn’t last long.”

    And what does “victory” mean to her?

    She answers without hesitation. “A return to a normal life… sometimes it seems we have put everything on pause.” That includes a different kind of life with her husband. “We’re not just spouses. I can safely say we are best friends,” she says.

    My first question to the first lady had been, “How are you?” She replied that, for all Ukrainians, their answer was, “We are holding on.”

    But, for how long? It’s a question no-one can answer.

    Olena Zelenska is one of the BBC’s 100 Women for 2022 – the others will be announced at the launch of the season on Tuesday 6 December

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine backlash: Roger Waters gigs in Poland cancelled

    In response to criticism of the musician’s position on the Ukraine war, Roger Waters, the co-founder of Pink Floyd, has cancelled scheduled performances in Poland.

    Live Nation Poland, the concert’s promoter, confirmed the cancellation but provided no explanation.

    The controversy was triggered by an open letter Waters wrote to Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska.

    In it, he said, “extreme nationalists” in Ukraine “have set your country on the path to this disastrous war”.

    He accused her husband, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, of failing to fulfill his election campaign promises to bring peace to the Donbas region and made no mention of Russia’s responsibility for the war.

    In response, Mrs Zelenska wrote on Twitter that it was Russia that invaded Ukraine and was now destroying its cities and killing civilians. “Roger Waters, you should ask for peace from the president of another country,” she wrote.

    Mr Water’s open letter led Łukasz Wantuch, a Krakow city councilor, to urge people to boycott the concerts.

    City councillors have drafted a resolution to declare Mr Waters persona non grata, due to be voted on at a session on September 28.

    “Taking into account Russia’s criminal attack on Ukraine as well as the increasing number of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers that are coming to light, [the councillors] express outrage at the theses and statements made by Mr Roger Waters in connection with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” the resolution states.

    Mr Waters, currently on tour in the US, hit back in another Facebook post entitled “Hey Łukasz Wantuch, Leave them kids alone”, referencing the lyrics of the classic Pink Floyd song, Another Brick in the Wall.

    He denied an earlier media report that he or his management had canceled the concerts themselves and accused Mr Wantuch of the “draconian censoring” of his work.

    Asked whether the cancellation was connected to Mr Waters’ comments, a venue spokesman for the Tauron Arena in Krakow told the BBC: “No comment.”

    The Polish government has been a staunch ally of Mr Zelensky. It has sent hundreds of Soviet-era tanks and other armaments to Ukraine and encouraged the European Union to introduce tougher sanctions against Russia.

    Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, the government decided to open Poland’s borders to millions of Ukrainian women and children fleeing the fighting.

    According to the United Nations Refugee Agency, UNHCR, close to 1.4 million Ukrainians have registered for temporary protection in neighboring Poland.

    Hundreds of thousands of refugees have been put up by Poles in their own homes.