Pressure on Solts for embargo on Russian gas and oil

Voices within the ruling coalition are growing for a rapid cessation of Russian oil and gas imports. Pressure also for the supply of heavy weapons to Ukraine.

Chancellor Olaf Soltz is under increasing pressure, with voices calling for an embargo on Russian oil and gas to rise within the ruling coalition.

Following his trip to the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, the Social Democrat, the head of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the German parliament, Michael Roth, is openly in favor of an immediate cessation of Russian oil imports. In an interview with German radio station DLF, he called for the formation of an international alliance, which would put an end to dependence on Russian energy supplies. “Putin is a war criminal. His goal is the annihilation of Ukraine,” he said.

For his part, the head of the European Affairs Committee, Anton Hoffreiter from the Greens, who also traveled to Lviv, is in favor of imposing an embargo on Russian gas, which he considers feasible and manageable. “At least I do not expect the federal government to impose a direct embargo on Russian coal and oil,” Passauer Neuen Presse reported.

“Fossil fuel trade does not bring peace”

But pressure on Soltz is growing in society as well, with representatives of the Fridays For Future environmental movement from Germany and Ukraine calling for an energy embargo on Russia. “We call for the immediate imposition of an embargo on Russian gas and oil, in support of Ukraine and the weakening of Putin,” said Louisa Neubauer and Ilier El Kortby, activists in Ukraine.

“We know that an embargo has a great impact on the economy, but it does not compare to the plight of Ukraine. We will not remain silent and just watch what is happening,” he said, stressing that the future of Europe and Ukraine energy. “The fossil fuel trade does not bring peace today. The war in Ukraine proves it every day.”

What will happen with the shipment of heavy weapons

At the same time, in addition to the issue of the embargo, pressure is mounting on the German government and personally on Olaf Solz to change its stance on the shipment of heavy weapons to Ukraine, with many MEPs believing that the conditions have now matured.

The chairman of the parliamentary defense committee, Marie Agnes Strak-Zimmermann, who also took part in the mission in Ukraine, continues her public stance in favor of providing further hope in Ukraine, characteristically stating in the Rheinische Post: “A state that is under attack has the right If we assist in the defense of a state in order to counter an illegal invasion from abroad, we do not become part of the war, it is different from an active intervention in the war. “Army, then we would have to shoot down Russian planes. That would be the beginning of participation in the war.”

She also blamed the chancellor for failing to co-ordinate a common voyage line for all German ministries involved, saying that at the moment it seemed that everyone was doing what they thought was right in the face of the war in Ukraine.

Dimitra Kyranoudi, Berlin

Source: Deutsche Welle

Source: Capital

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