G7 Promises Robust Aid for Ukraine

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The finance ministers of the world's top industrialized countries promised a firm aid package to Ukraine on Sunday, while calling for reform and a central role by the International Monetary Fund.

Earlier, leaders of the countries symbolically billed themselves as the "G7," saying Russia's actions were incompatible with the Group of Eight Nations, which Moscow joined in 1997, and withdrew from preparations for June's G8 summit in Sochi.

"We are united in our commitment to provide strong financial backing to Ukraine," the finance ministers of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States said in a statement released by the US Treasury.

They welcomed the planned visit of an IMF team to Ukraine this week to begin technical and policy discussions.

"The International Monetary Fund remains the institution best prepared to help Ukraine address its immediate economic challenges through policy advice and financing, conditioned on needed reforms," the finance ministers said.

"IMF support will be critical in unlocking additional assistance from the World Bank, other international financial institutions, the EU, and bilateral sources."

Interim Ukrainian authorities who succeeded ousted president Viktor Yanukovych had launched a call for IMF help and the world financial body immediately said it stood ready to respond.

IMF programs, however, are usually conditioned on reforms taking place.

"Closely monitoring" the situation, the G7 ministers said the governmental transition "offers a unique opportunity to put in place urgently needed market-oriented reforms that will restore financial stability, unleash economic potential and allow Ukraine's people to better achieve their economic aspirations."

"We are also committed to mobilize rapid technical assistance to support Ukraine in addressing its macroeconomic, regulatory, and anti-corruption challenges," they added.

In their separate statement, the G7 leaders said Russia's "clear" violation of Ukraine's sovereignty by sending troops into Crimea contravened the principles on which the G7 and G8 groupings operates.

Comments 2
Thumb chrisrushlau 03 March 2014, 17:08

In particular, the G7 announced that it would look most disapprovingly at any attempts to restore the elected government in Urkraine.
"Democracy, quite frankly, does not work, which is why Israel is a beacon to the peoples, as it says in the Bible," said Canada's non-lawyer prime minister, Stephen Harper.

Thumb chrisrushlau 03 March 2014, 17:12

Seriously, we have to wonder why the G7 is so ideologically opposed to democracy when that would seem to be its governing philosophy: rationalism via market structures. The most plausible theory is that the Israel lobby is conducting its Massada/Samson option overseas even while Israel itself is suffering the consequences, not being as committed to state suicide itself as its foreign partners are on its behalf. Why, then, is the Israel lobby so strong in the G7? Are the citizens of these states too comfortable and too lazy to look after their own constitutions, are they racist in such a broad sense that they even distinguish good Slavs from bad Slavs, or is the Israel lobby just overpoweringly dominant in some covert way that nobody can see, unlike the overt power of "the West" in destabilizing the middle east and Africa?