UN chief urges end to senseless and ruthless war in Ukraine

Antonio Guterres urged the world to unite and end the war in Ukraine, calling it senseless, ruthless, and “limitless in its potential for global harm”

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UN chief wants continuation of Black Sea grain deal

UNITED NATIONS, July 8: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday called for the continuation of the agreements that allow food and fertilizer exports from Russia and Ukraine. The secretary-general noted the indispensable role food and fertilizer exports from Russia and Uk

UN chief to meet Ukrainian president in Kiev

UNITED NATIONS, March 8: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kiev on Wednesday, a UN spokesman said. "The secretary-general has just arrived in Poland on his way to Ukraine," said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for Gu

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy hosts talks with UN chief, Turkey leader

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will use his first visit to Ukraine since the war started nearly six months ago to seek ways to expand the export of grain from Europe’s breadbasket to the world’s needy.

UN chief hails resumption of Ukraine grain exports via Black Sea

The agreement between the Russian Federation and Ukraine to break a months-long blockade of grain deliveries via the Black Sea

UN chief warns of global chaos as result of Ukraine conflict

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday warned that the Ukraine conflict may trigger social and economic chaos around the world

UN chief worries Ukraine war overshadowing climate fight

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday warned that the Ukraine war is diverting attention away from climate change

Ukraine war: Rockets hit Kyiv as UN chief admits failings

APRIL 29: Antonio Guterres said the council had failed to prevent or end the war in Ukraine. This was "a source of great disappointment, frustration and anger," he said. "Let me be very clear: [it] failed to do everything in its power to prevent and end this war," he added. The 15-member UN Security Council is specifically tasked with ensuring global peace and security. But it has faced criticism, including from Ukraine's government, for failing to act since the invasion began in February. Russia is one of five permanent members of the body and it has vetoed more than one resolution on the conflict. Mr Guterres was speaking on Thursday evening at a joint news conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has previously criticised the Security Council. "I am here to say to you Mr President, and to the people of Ukraine, we will not give up," he said. But Mr Guterres also defended his organisation, admitting that while the Security Council had been "paralysed" the UN was taking other actions. "The UN is the 1,400 staff members in Ukraine who are working to provide assistance, food, cash [and] other forms of support," he told the BBC. At Thursday's briefing, President Zelensky said Mr Guterres had a chance to witness first-had "all the war crimes" committed by Russia in Ukraine. The Ukrainian leader again described Russia's actions in his country as "genocide". During the UN chief's visit, two blasts hit the central Shevchenko district of Kyiv, with three people taken to hospital with injuries, according to the city's mayor. Mr Guterres also visited several sites where Ukraine accuses Russia of committing war crimes. Moscow denies the accusation. In the town of Borodyanka, north-west of Kyiv, Mr Guterres spoke to reporters in front of buildings that had been destroyed by strikes and shelling. He said the site made him imagine what it would be like for his own family, calling the war in Ukraine an "absurdity in the 21st Century." And Mr Guterres made a passionate plea to save thousands of people in Ukraine's southern city of Mariupol, which has been virtually destroyed by weeks of heavy Russian bombardment. "Mariupol is a crisis within a crisis," he said. "Thousands of civilians need life-saving assistance, many are elderly and in need of medical care, or have limited mobility. They need an escape route out of the apocalypse." Russia has so far denied repeated requests by Kyiv to allow the last Ukrainian defenders and civilians trapped in the Azovstal industrial area to be evacuated. But Mr Guterres later told the BBC that Russia's President Vladimir Putin had agreed "in principle" to allow civilians to evacuate the city. Previous evacuation attempts have stalled and local officials have blamed Russian shelling.

UN chief and Russia’s Putin agree on key Ukraine evacuation

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Russian President Vladimir Putin met one-on-one Tuesday for the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine.

UN chief wants Ukraine humanitarian cease-fire

The United Nations chief has launched an initiative to immediately explore possible arrangements for “a humanitarian cease-fire in Ukraine".

UN chief calls for international cooperation for Ukraine

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that the war in Ukraine calls for international cooperation and solidarity to support everyone affected, and to overcome the clear violation of international law.