Giorgia Meloni heads to Ukraine amid tensions
within Italian coalition
Prime minister to reassert Italian support for Kyiv by
visiting capital day after US president Joe Biden
Russia-Ukraine
war – latest news updates
Angela
Giuffrida in Rome
Tue 21 Feb
2023 08.02 GMT
The Italian
prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, is heading to Kyiv to meet the Ukrainian
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and reiterate Italy’s support for the war-torn
country, as she navigates tensions on the issue within her rightwing alliance
and divided public opinion.
Tuesday’s
trip is seen as one of the most significant made by Meloni since she came to
power in October and comes a week after her coalition partner Silvio
Berlusconi, the Forza Italia leader, blamed Zelenskiy for Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine.
The office
of Meloni, who met her Polish counterpart on Monday evening, has not released
details of the trip for security reasons.
Her visit
carries symbolic significance, given that it comes a day after the US
president, Joe Biden, made a surprise trip to the Ukrainian capital.
“It is a
really important trip for Meloni, as she needs to show her reliability to
Zelenskiy, but more so to her US and European partners,” said Sofia Ventura, a
politics professor at the University of Bologna. “And she needs to do this
knowing that her two allies are unreliable due to their relations with Russia.
The spotlight is on Kyiv because of Biden’s visit, and will linger for Meloni,
so she needs to show that she can match up.”
Meloni was
forced to reiterate Italy’s firm support for Ukraine last week after
Berlusconi, a former prime minister who has had a long friendship with Putin,
said that if he was still leading the government he would not seek a meeting
with Zelenskiy, arguing that if the Ukrainian president had “stopped attacking
the two autonomous republics of the Donbas” then the war would not have
happened.
“I judge
this gentleman very, very negatively,” Berlusconi added.
His remarks
unleashed a wave of criticism, with Oleg Nikolenko, spokesperson for the
Ukrainian foreign ministry, accusing him of “kissing Putin’s bloody hands”.
Berlusconi’s
comments also led the European People’s party (EPP), of which Forza Italia is a
member, to scrap a planned event in Naples in June.
In an
interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera on Monday, Zelenskiy
said he was grateful to Italy for sending weapons and had faith in Meloni’s
capacity to maintain her government’s support for his country. In reference to
Berlusconi’s boast last September that Putin had sent him bottles of vodka for
his 86th birthday, Zelenskiy joked: “Maybe we should send him a little
something … we have great quality Ukrainian vodka”.
Furthermore,
Meloni has to keep in check ally Matteo Salvini, the leader of the League, who
in the past heaped praise on Putin and has criticised the European sanctions
against Russia.
“The fact
that Meloni’s visit to Kyiv comes a day after Biden signals a government
position that will make it very difficult to backtrack on,” said Lorenzo
Castellani, a politics professor at Luiss University in Rome. “It also gives
her stronger international visibility while putting Berlusconi and Salvini into
the corner.”
Meloni is
assuming a political risk with her unwavering support of Ukraine, given more
than 50% of Italians are against sending weapons to the country and are
sceptical of sanctions. But with her Brothers of Italy party capturing over 30%
in opinion polls against less than 10% for both of her allies, she can afford
to take the risk.
“She knows
it’s unpopular but she is in a strong position, whereas the other two are
leaders in decline,” added Castellani.
.webp)
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