British lawmaker Johnny Mercer has urged prime minister Boris Johnson to stop foreign aid worth more than £50m being sent to India amid its repeated abstention in resolutions at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) against Russia for invading Ukraine.
Mr Mercer has said Britain should end this donation to India as “far worthier causes are around”.
“In 2021/22 we are giving £55.3m to India in Foreign Aid. I am a strong supporter of foreign aid and voted against this Government’s reduction of it. However if we sanction Putin’s mates, it’s time to end this donation too. Far worthier causes around,” the British lawmaker said on Twitter.
The British lawmaker also shared a report by The Telegraph which referred to Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s refusal to denounce Russian president Vladimir Putin despite pressure exerted from the Biden administration.
India has been repeatedly asked to distance itself from Russia after Moscow invaded Ukraine last week, in order to strengthen the condemnation of the military offensive by western nations.
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New Delhi has not yet officially taken a stand against Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, which marked its ninth day on Friday, although it has called for peace.
The Modi administration, a Washington ally and a Quad partner but a heavily importer of arms and artillery from Russia, is in a diplomatic fix, as a result of which it has abstained from voting on a resolution deploring Moscow’s acts at the UNSC.
This was India’s third abstention condemning Russia’s action in less than a week even as the escalating conflict gripped Kyiv for more than a week. In the meetings, the Indian envoy has pressed for a diplomatic route and an end to violence.
The resolution ‘Aggression against Ukraine’ was co-sponsored by nearly 100 UN member countries like Afghanistan, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Kuwait, Singapore, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Donald Lu, a top US diplomat, said US officials held talks with New Delhi to “underscore the importance of a collective response condemning Russia’s invasion”.
He added that India should find time to distance itself from Russia.
"What I can say is that India is a really important security partner of ours now, and that we value that partnership. Moving forward, I hope that part of what happens with the extreme criticism that Russia has faced is that India will find it is now time to further distance itself from Russia," Mr Lu said.
India is one of the four members of the Quad alliance comprising the US, Australia and Japan, which met on Thursday on the sidelines of the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Ukraine.
The Quad leaders said they had "discussed the ongoing conflict and humanitarian crisis in Ukraine and assessed its broader implications," in a joint statement released after the meeting.
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