Sánchez Visits Kyiv on Day Spain Starts EU Presidency to Underline Bloc’s Support for Ukraine

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attends the European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attends the European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
TT

Sánchez Visits Kyiv on Day Spain Starts EU Presidency to Underline Bloc’s Support for Ukraine

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attends the European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium June 29, 2023. (Reuters)
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attends the European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium June 29, 2023. (Reuters)

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez started Spain's six-month presidency of the European Union with a lightning visit to Kyiv on Saturday to underline the bloc’s support of Ukraine in the face of the invasion by Russia.

Sánchez arrived in the Ukrainian capital by train from Poland.

The Spanish government said he would address Ukraine's parliament at 0830 GMT (4:30 a.m. EDT) and then meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The two will give a news conference around 1030 GMT (6:30 a.m. EDT).

Zelenskyy announced the visit Thursday in an address to European leaders gathered for a summit in Brussels. He highlighted the symbolism of the visit and the importance of the next six months for Europe. He added that it was the moment to begin negotiations for Ukraine’s entry into the EU.

Speaking Friday in Brussels, Sánchez said, “The war in Ukraine will be one of the great priorities of our presidency, with the focus being on guaranteeing the unity (on the issue) among all member states.”

This was Sánchez’s third time in Kyiv since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Sánchez will return to Madrid by Sunday, when he meets with the European Council President Charles Michel, a day before the arrival of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and the college of EU commissioners.

Besides Ukraine, Spain hopes to make progress on several major EU issues during its presidency, which ends on Dec. 31.

Sánchez believes that the EU will finalize a controversial pact on migration despite lingering differences within the 27-nation group with Poland and Hungary still evident on Friday.

Earlier this month, EU countries a breakthrough on asylum law reform, sealing an agreement on a plan to share responsibility for migrants entering Europe without authorization. Only Poland and Hungary voted against.

EU lawmakers have warned that this may be the last chance to solve the issue before EU-wide elections in a year’s time, when migration is likely to be a hot-button issue once again.

The rotating presidency comes as Spain faces an early general election on July 23, which polls shows could oust Sánchez’s leftist coalition government and replace it with a conservative administration, or even a coalition with the extreme right, and follow a trend happening in much of Europe.

Sánchez has said that he wants to focus on rebuilding intra-European supply chains to avoid shortages and guarantee energy sovereignty. This would include establishing European dominance in the fields of artificial intelligence and digital security.

Spain also hopes the EU-Latin America summit set for July 17-18 in Brussels, the first in eight years, will represent “a qualitative leap” in relations between the two regions and will lead to a powerful investment agenda with Latin American and Caribbean nations.

Spain also wants to make EU progress on the green transition and electricity market reform. Spain has significant experience in the sector as it forges ahead with solar, wind power and green hydrogen installations at an unprecedented rate.



Fears of Violence Greet Return of English Football Season

Clashes have erupted in cities across England and Northern Ireland since a mass stabbing in Southport but authorities say far-right elements have fueled the unrest. Roland LLOYD PARRY / AFP
Clashes have erupted in cities across England and Northern Ireland since a mass stabbing in Southport but authorities say far-right elements have fueled the unrest. Roland LLOYD PARRY / AFP
TT

Fears of Violence Greet Return of English Football Season

Clashes have erupted in cities across England and Northern Ireland since a mass stabbing in Southport but authorities say far-right elements have fueled the unrest. Roland LLOYD PARRY / AFP
Clashes have erupted in cities across England and Northern Ireland since a mass stabbing in Southport but authorities say far-right elements have fueled the unrest. Roland LLOYD PARRY / AFP

Authorities are eyeing the start of the English football season this weekend with trepidation, following riots which have rocked towns and cities across the country.
Dozens of teams in the English Football League -- below the high-profile Premier League -- start playing their first games from Saturday afternoon, including in cities that have seen disorder, said AFP.
The unrest followed a knife attack that killed three children. But officials have blamed far-right elements -- some with links to England's decades-old football hooligan scene -- for orchestrating the violence which saw mosques and immigration-linked sites torched and police targeted.
Tommy Robinson, a notorious anti-Muslim agitator with a string of criminal convictions including for football-related offences, has been accused of helping to fuel the unrest through constant social media posts about the events.
Crowds at some gatherings were heard chanting his name -- which is actually a pseudonym borrowed from an infamous Luton Town Football Club hooligan in the 2000s.
The prospect of thousands gathering Saturday for games in towns and cities including Middlesbrough, Hull and London has prompted concern that unrest could flare again after two nights of relative quiet.
More than 80,000 fans are also expected at Wembley on Saturday when Manchester City and Manchester United play for the FA Community Shield.
'Tarnish'
Prime Minister Keir Starmer, an avid football fan, conceded Friday that the start of the new season "added into the mix" of challenges facing police.
"Whatever the challenge, we have to rise to it," he insisted to UK broadcasters.
The UK Football Policing Unit (UKFPU) said forces nationwide were collaborating to ensure that "all relevant intelligence" was shared ahead of the football games.
A UKFPU spokesperson said it was being updated about arrests during the recent unrest and the possibility of banning those people from football stadiums.
Courts make Football Banning Orders after a football-related criminal conviction or following a police request to keep individuals from attending matches and even nearby places in some cases.
They have been extended in recent years to cover convictions for online hate crime linked to the sport and convictions for selling or taking Class A drugs.
Chief Constable Gavin Stephens, who heads the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) overseeing the UKFPU, urged people not to "tarnish football with the violence that we've seen".
"Football brings communities together," he told a media briefing.
"Yes, some of these violent thugs attach themselves to the fringes of it, but not everywhere, not all clubs, and certainly not for the totality of football."
'Crossovers'
Mark Doidge, a Loughborough University academic who has researched UK and European football fan cultures, said English football typically requires "a major police operation" but that officers now have experience.
He downplayed any overlap between recent disorder and fans of the so-called beautiful game, and the notion that English football was being used to recruit people to the far-right.
"Although there are crossovers between the demographics -- some fans are also far-right -- not all fans are, and not all far-right are fans or attend matches," he told AFP.
"There doesn't seem to be any coordinated activity taking place at football, and no protests have been planned for stadiums."
Doidge noted some fans may spontaneously chant or protest about recent events, which could itself prove divisive with other fans and provide an unpredictable element for police.
"If confrontation comes from fans of the same team, then this might be something that they haven't prepared for," he added.
Meanwhile, some football clubs in towns which have seen recent rioting have been spoken out against the troubles.
"We utterly condemn the violent and racist scenes we have seen on the streets of Middlesbrough," Steve Gibson, chairman of the northeast English town's club said in a joint statement with its local MP and mayor this week.
"We in Middlesbrough have a proud and inclusive history. Over the centuries our town and our football club have welcomed people from across the world."