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Ukraine pleads with Australia to remove red tape holding back aid


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 * Politics
 * Federal
 * Russia-Ukraine war


UKRAINE PLEADS WITH AUSTRALIA TO REMOVE RED TAPE HOLDING BACK AID

BY DAVID CROWE AND ANDREW PROBYN

February 28, 2024 — 1.31pm
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The federal government is being urged to scale up its aid to Ukraine to help
confront a growing danger from the Russian army amid new signs of a reluctance
to send more military equipment, ammunition, coal and humanitarian supplies.

The Ukrainian community issued the call in a direct plea to Defence Minister
Richard Marles to remove obstacles within his department that have held back
some of the support, while also thanking him for $50 million in aid promised
this month.



Co-chair of the Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organisations Kateryna
Argyrou and Ukraine’s ambassador to Australia Vasyl Myroshnychenko urged
Canberra to scale up its aid to Ukraine during an address to the National Press
Club on Wednesday. Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

With Russian forces advancing in eastern Ukraine, opposition foreign affairs
spokesman Simon Birmingham backed the new request and said the government was
being too timid in sending help.

Australia was one of the biggest contributors to Ukraine from the non-NATO
countries in the months after Russia’s full-scale invasion two years ago, but
has fallen down the list as it waited to do more while other countries increased
their work.


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Worried that officials are blocking aid without good reason, the Australian
Federation of Ukrainian Organisations said on Wednesday that the Department of
Defence did not need to make “risk assessments” about the aid when combatants in
the field knew what they needed.

“If it’s a risk assessment issue, please let Ukraine make that risk assessment –
they’re the ones on the front line, they’re the ones that can say whether they
can use a certain type of equipment or not,” AFUO co-chair Kateryna Argyrou
said.

“The decision being made by someone that’s not in a war situation is very
different from someone that desperately needs something on the front line.

“Please consider those requests. They are desperately needed and they literally
go towards saving lives.”

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Argyrou, an investment banker whose sisters and other family members are in
Ukraine, spoke directly to Marles from the podium of the National Press Club on
Wednesday to thank him for the help so far but emphasised that more military aid
was needed.

The government rebuffed a request from Ukraine for old Taipan helicopters from
the Australian Defence Force, which chose to bury the airframes rather than ship
them overseas, and it has taken no action on a request for more coal shipments.

The Ukrainian ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroshnychenko, said Australia
could help by supplying Abrams tanks, to add to Bushmasters, artillery and
ammunition already provided.

“We have shown that we do not squander your practical assistance,” he said. “Let
us show you that we can do more if you provide us with more.”

Australians have provided about $20 million in humanitarian aid, Argyrou said,
but she added that Ukraine could become a “forgotten war” because it was
receiving less attention in the media and the donations from ordinary citizens
were falling.



Birmingham said the government should act on Ukrainian requests for military
equipment and supply coal as the previous government did.

“What we need to see is a government thinking about everything that can be done,
rather than contemplating only the bare minimum,” he said.

“Where Defence assets are being disposed of, or are planned to be disposed of,
rather than burying them, let’s gift them and let Ukraine use them for their
defence and their safety. Let’s be quick about responding to things like coal
requests.”

Whitehaven Coal, which agreed to ship 70,000 tonnes of coal to Ukraine in March
2022 under a $30 million deal with the Morrison government, told this masthead
it stood ready to provide more help.

“If called upon once again by an Australian government to make a shipment of
coal available to support energy security for the people of Ukraine, we would
look upon that request favourably,” the company said.



The Ukrainian ambassador wrote to Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong on
December 5 last year requesting a “year-long” supply of Australian coal. He has
not received a reply.

The national secretaries of three major unions – the SDA, AWU and the MEU –
urged the government to facilitate Ukraine’s request, writing to Resources
Minister Madeleine King on December 15.

“Ukrainian lives are at stake. Our unions will do all we can to facilitate this
urgent, humanitarian project,” Gerard Dwyer (SDA), Paul Farrow (AWU) and Grahame
Kelly (MEU) told the minister.

“We appeal to you to help provide the resources to ensure that Ukrainians can
live and fight another day. It is the least we can do.”

Marles declined to comment after the event at the National Press Club, but a
spokeswoman for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government was
providing “meaningful support” to Ukraine, totalling $960 million to date,
including about $780 million in military assistance.



“Over the past two weeks, the government has announced new and additional
support to Ukraine, and additional sanctions aimed to hold Russia to account,”
the spokeswoman said.

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Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior analyst Malcolm Davis said the
conflict in Ukraine was about a wider test for democratic values from
authoritarian nations such as Russia and China.

“We either defend those values, and we defend those interests, or we don’t – and
we’re at a crucial testing point,” he said.

World Vision chief Daniel Wordsworth, who will travel to Ukraine in two weeks,
endorsed the call for more humanitarian aid for the country.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis.
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License this article
 * Russia-Ukraine war
 * Ukraine
 * Richard Marles
 * Russia
 * ADF

David Crowe is chief political correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and
The Age.Connect via Twitter or email.
Andrew Probyn is Nine Network's national affairs editor, working out of the
Federal bureau.


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