Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has demanded a special
United Nations tribunal to impose ‘just punishment’ on Russia for its invasion
of Ukraine. These include imposing financial penalties and stripping Moscow of
its veto power in the Security Council.
Zelenskiy's
recorded address to world leaders at the UN General Assembly on Wednesday came
after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered Moscow's first wartime mobilization
since World War II and threatened to use nuclear weapons to defend Russia in what
he has cast as a defining East-West clash.
Moscow plans to conscript some 300,000 troops in an apparent
escalation of its Ukraine invasion that began in February and has left
thousands dead, displaced millions and reduced towns to rubble.
"A crime has been committed against Ukraine, and we
demand just punishment," Zelenskiy told the UN body.
"A special tribunal should be created to punish Russia
for the crime of aggression against our state... Russia should pay for this war
with its assets," the Ukrainian president said, urging the UN to
"remove the right of veto" from Russia as a Security Council member.
Zelenskiy
laid out what he said were five non-negotiable conditions for peace. These
included: punishment for Russian aggression, restoration of Ukraine's security
and territorial integrity, and security guarantees.
Many delegates at the UN gave Zelenskiy a standing ovation
at the end of his speech.
Earlier on Wednesday, Putin had ordered the military draft
in a televised address in which he also announced moves to annex four Ukrainian
provinces and threatened to use nuclear weapons to defend Russia, declaring:
"It's not a bluff".
The reservists' main task will be to reinforce the front
line in Ukraine, which is currently over 1,000 km (621 miles) long, Russian
Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said.
The reservists will need training and Western military
analysts said it will be several months before they see action.
Flights out of Russia quickly sold out, and jailed
opposition leader Alexei Navalny called for mass demonstrations against the mobilization.
Independent protest monitoring group OVD-Info said more than
1,300 people had been detained in protests by Wednesday evening.
Offering
no evidence, Putin accused officials in NATO states of threatening to use
nuclear weapons against Russia. They should know that "the weathervane can
turn towards them", he said, adding that Russia "also has various
means of destruction".
"When the territorial integrity of our country is
threatened, we will certainly use all the means at our disposal to protect
Russia and our people. It's not a bluff."
US President Joe Biden, in a speech to the UN General Assembly,
responded: "Again, just today, President Putin has made overt nuclear
threats against Europe, in a reckless disregard for the responsibilities of the
non-proliferation regime."
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemed Putin's
"irresponsible escalation of the war", saying "Putin's behavior
only goes to show that his invasion is failing."
Foreign
Ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) advanced economies confirmed in a
meeting in New York on Wednesday their cooperation in extending support for
Ukraine and responding to food and energy security, the Japanese Foreign
Ministry said.
"It's clear Russia wants to destroy Ukraine," EU
Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell said. "We will not be
intimidated."
Russia
and Ukraine carried out an unexpected prisoner swap on Wednesday, the largest
since the war began and involving almost 300 people, including 10 foreigners
and the commanders who led a prolonged Ukrainian defence of Mariupol earlier
this year.
The foreigners released included two Britons and a Moroccan
who had been sentenced to death in June after being captured fighting for
Ukraine. Also freed in the deal brokered by Saudi Arabia, according to a Saudi
ministry, were three other Britons, two Americans, a Croatian, and a Swedish
national.
The
released Ukrainians had been captured after a long battle for the port city of
Mariupol earlier this year and included top military commanders, said Andriy
Yermak, the head of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's office.
The moves come at a time when Russia has been facing a
string of battlefield failures, with its invasion force routed in northeastern
Ukraine.
Ukrainian forces say they are now poised to push deeper into
territory Moscow had captured over months of heavy fighting.
"No
amount of threats and propaganda can hide the fact that Ukraine is winning this
war, the international community is united and Russia is becoming a global
pariah," said British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace.
Russia's mobilization may be the riskiest domestic political
move of Putin's two decades in power, and followed months of Kremlin promises
it would do no such thing.
The war has so far appeared to enjoy popular support in a
country where independent media have all been shut down and public criticism of
the "special military operation" is banned.
But for many ordinary Russians, especially in the urban
middle classes, the prospect of being sent to fight would be the first hint of
the war affecting them personally.
Several
Western military experts said drafting hundreds of thousands of new troops
would take months, do little to slow Russia's losses, and could even make
matters worse by drawing resources away from the battlefield to train and equip
recruits.