Toronto

'We're ready to die for our children,' Kyiv mayor tells Toronto city council

The mayor and deputy mayor of Kyiv spoke to Toronto city council Thursday, thanking Canada for its support and providing a stark perspective on the violence still raging in Ukraine.

Warning: This story contains graphic images

Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko, left, and Deputy Mayor Mykola Povoroznyk spoke to Toronto city council from Ukraine via video link Thursday. (City of Toronto/Youtube)

Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko knows Ukraine is fighting a war at a disadvantage.

The besieged country doesn't have the power of Russia's weapons, tanks or planes.

But to hear Klitschko tell it when addressing Toronto city council Thursday morning, Ukraine has something Russia doesn't.

"We, Ukrainian, fighting and defending our cities, our families, our children.… We're ready to die for our children and for the future of our children," he said.

Klitschko and Deputy Mayor Mykola Povoroznyk spoke from Ukraine via video link at Toronto city hall, thanking councillors for Canada's support during the ongoing Russian invasion. 

"Very thankful for everything what Canada doing right now for Ukraine," Klitschko said. "For your political support, for your economic support. To take refugees from Ukraine, to make humanitarian support for our country, and also it's very important right now for Ukraine to receive defensive weapons from our partner."

Russia's six-week-long invasion of Ukraine has forced over four million people to flee abroad, killed or injured thousands, left a quarter of the population homeless, turned cities into rubble and prompted a host of Western restrictions on Russian elites and the economy.

Ukrainian soldiers recover the remains of four slain civilians from inside a charred vehicle in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv, on Tuesday. (Felipe Dana/The Associated Press)

Klitschko told councillors that it's difficult to grasp the full scope of the horror inflicted on the region purely from photos and images from afar.

"It's genocide," he said.

Toronto and Kyiv are connected as part of Toronto's International Alliance Program, which is a "friendship city agreement" between the two cities established back in 1991, the city said in a news release.

According to the 2016 National Household Survey, there are over 72,000 Torontonians who identify as being of Ukrainian origin, the city says.

"We're not sister cities by accident," Mayor John Tory said, noting that Toronto and Kyiv are the largest cities in their respective countries, with populations around three million.

WATCH | Picking up the pieces in Ukraine:

The carnage and chaos of war left behind in a Ukrainian town

3 years ago
Duration 2:51
WARNING: This video contains graphic footage | Uncertainty surrounds the town of Borodyanka — near the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv — where residents are coping with the carnage and chaos left by Russian troops, not knowing if they’ll return.

But there is a "stark, tragic difference" between the two cities today, Tory said.

"Here, it is peaceful … there, you and your fellow residents … are under illegal, unjustifiable attack."

In an impassioned speech, Klitschko repeatedly stressed that countries must cut off all ties with Russia, as any trade at this point amounts to "bloody money.

"It's Ukrainian blood," he said.

Before a standing ovation from members of council and students from multiple Ukranian schools, Povoroznyk echoed those comments, and called for the strongest possible response to Russia's invasion, especially considering the hardship and deaths inflicted upon civilians.

"We will stand and we will win, because we have no other choice," he said through a translator.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adam Carter

Reporter

Adam Carter is a Newfoundlander who now calls Toronto home. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamCarterCBC or drop him an email at adam.carter@cbc.ca.

With files from Thomson Reuters