Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Joly urges China to include Ukraine in peace talks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2023 03:26 PM
  • Joly urges China to include Ukraine in peace talks

OTTAWA - The role of developing countries in the Ukraine conflict took centre stage Friday as Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly met with her Norwegian counterpart in Ottawa.

Joly said Canada has been pushing China to expand its talks with Russia to include Ukraine, while South Africa's envoy urged Canada to instead support a settlement to the war.

"We need to broaden the coalition of states with which we are engaging," Joly said Friday. "It's a question of international security."

She was speaking at a public discussion on multilateralism with Norwegian Foreign Affairs Minister Anniken Huitfeldt in Ottawa, hosted by the Global Centre for Pluralism.

The two touched briefly on relations between the two nations, which are both navigating climate change and Indigenous reconciliation. But the event focused primarily on getting developing countries to pressure Russia to end its invasion of Ukraine.

To that end, Joly said she had asked Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang to have his country's president, Xi Jinping, speak with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

China has presented a plan for a political settlement to the conflict, but Joly said she used the G20 foreign ministers' meeting in India this month to push Beijing to broaden its talks beyond simply engaging with Moscow.

"When I was in Ukraine, what I clearly heard from President Zelenskyy is that he hadn't talked yet to Xi Jinping. So when I met with my Chinese counterpart, (that) was clear in my ask," she said.

"If China wants really to play a role in terms of peace discussions, well, first and foremost, there should be a conversation between both leaders."

Meanwhile, Huitfeldt acknowledged that developing countries have lamented the Ukraine crisis diverted attention and funding away from issues that have festered for years.

"I can fully understand the frustration, because they're suffering from rising food prices and climate change. So we need to really step up," she said.

"We are taking money away from the humanitarian crises in other parts of the world, and they see that we focus more on Ukraine — which is natural, because this is our neighbourhood."

Huitfeldt added that Oslo prefers to be a neutral mediator, but Russia's invasion presents a security risk to Norway, which is why the country made an exemption to rules that forbid exporting arms to countries in conflict.

She added that many developing countries want a tougher stance on Israel's illegal settlements in Palestinian territories, otherwise criticism of Russia's invasion rings hollow.

"They focus a lot on double standards, which is also understandable," she said. "We need to be very firm when it comes to occupation everywhere."

The pair took questions from the audience, including South Africa's High Commissioner to Canada, Rieaz Shaik.

He commended Canada and Norway for their work in ending apartheid in his country, but urged both to stop policies he argued will prolong the conflict in Ukraine.

"I feel incredibly intimidated by sitting with a group of people who are all like-minded. But I think the value is that when you sit with like-minded people, you have the danger of what is called the echo chamber," he said.

"The vast majority of the world's people live in the (global) south and we very much appreciate that you hear our voice when we say to you that we feel voiceless, we feel unheard, we feel ignored, and we would appeal to you to do something about that."

Shaik argued a negotiated settlement is better than having countries arm both Ukraine and Russia.

"We are on the brink of a catastrophe that is unheard of in the history of humanity," he said. "The war, the invasion, must stop. But listen to the other view … that says we can get around the table and we can resolve this conflict."

Joly replied that Canada arms Ukraine because a Russian defeat is "the only way to get to peace" and dissuade countries from violating territorial sovereignty. She added that global financial institutions need reform to help developing countries overcome severe debts.

Huitfeldt said Norway had tried a sustained campaign of working with neighbouring Russia to promote democracy.

"We've been working closely with Russia for more than 30 years to try to create a space and more openness within Russia," she said, but Putin established himself as a "strong man" authoritarian who trampled on civil society.

"These men are not really strong, because they cannot accept dissenting voices. So in fact, they're extremely weak."

The two foreign affairs ministers also held a formal bilateral discussion about impacting both countries.

That includes Ottawa's decision last month to end fish-farming licences in the Discovery Islands in B.C., a decision that has split local Indigenous communities who had partnered with three Norwegian firms to operate open-net salmon farms.

Meanwhile, Huitfeldt said she proactively raised an issue in a Thursday discussion with Joly and Indigenous leaders from Canada about a conflict in Norway.

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg was arrested this month in Oslo at a protest in support of Indigenous Sámi people who argued wind turbines were disrupting the traditional practice of reindeer herding.

Huitfeldt said she informed Indigenous leaders in Ottawa that Norway had formally apologized to Sámi people. "We acknowledge that the decision to reward licenses to build and operate the wind turbines had a substantive negative impact on their ability to practice their own culture, in violation of human rights," she said.

Joly said she couldn't comment on Norway's domestic issues.

"We've shared our own experience with dealing with reconciliation. Norway is undergoing very important truth and reconciliation work."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists
Scientists say climate change is likely playing a role in this week's catastrophic flooding in British Columbia. Highways are blocked and communities have been evacuated after bucketing rain caused mudslides in several parts of the province.

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill
Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh wants the Liberal government to pay the cost of fixing Iqaluit's ongoing water emergency. The 8,000 people who live in Nunavut's capital haven't been able to drink their tap water since Oct. 12 when it was found to contain fuel.

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

Greens begin search for interim leader

Greens begin search for interim leader
The Green party is looking for an interim leader to take the helm before a fresh leadership election among its members. The troubled party, which has been beset by infighting and sniping, has accepted the resignation of Annamie Paul who last week stepped down.

Greens begin search for interim leader

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle
Officers were called to Davie and Thurlow streets in response to a two-car collision between a Dodge Ram and a Toyota Prius. The impact of that collision resulted in the Dodge Ram skidding and hitting a wheelchair-bound man on the sidewalk of the intersection.

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch
The James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled to blast off Dec. 18 aboard the Ariane 5 rocket from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana. The orbiting infrared observatory, a collaboration between NASA and the European and Canadian space agencies, will be 100 times more powerful than its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990.

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson
Wilkinson is three weeks removed from the cabinet shuffle that made him the fourth natural resources minister in the last six years. Now after helming the environment department tasked with combating climate change, he's in charge of the department that regulates and promotes many of the products that cause it.

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson