KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy marked Independence Day on Sunday alongside Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who said Ukraine would receive more than C$1 billion ($723 million) in military aid from a previously announced package next month.
Three and a half years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Zelenskiy is facing pressure from Washington to make concessions to Russia as U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to broker a peace deal.
“We are all working to ensure that the end of this war would mean the guarantee of peace for Ukraine, so that neither war nor the threat of war are left for our children to inherit,” Zelenskiy told a crowd of dignitaries in Kyiv’s Sophia Square, against the backdrop of an 11th century cathedral.
As well as Carney, on his first visit to Ukraine since taking office in March, Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, attended the ceremony. Zelenskiy presented Kellogg with a state honour.
“We need peace,” Zelenskiy told Kellogg as he handed him the medal in a leather case.
Zelenskiy acknowledged the human cost of the war, but said that Ukrainians would fight to remain on their land.
Ukraine is now working with its European allies to draft potential frameworks for post-war security guarantees for Kyiv, which Trump has expressed openness to.
($1 = 1.3826 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Max Hunder in Kyiv;Writing by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne;Editing by William Mallard, David Goodman and Helen Popper)
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