泽伦斯基夫人 英国人数钱时 我们数尸体

泽伦斯基夫人:英国人数钱时 我们数尸体

 

2022年09月03日 13:09 来源:世界日报

乌克兰第一夫人欧莲娜•泽伦斯基接受BBC专访,呼吁全球重视战争中的人道危机,图为欧莲娜今年7月应邀于美国国会发表演说。(美联社)

 

乌克兰第一夫人欧莲娜•泽伦斯基(Olena Zelenska)接受英国广播公司(BBC)专访,谈打了超过半年的俄乌战争。她说,战争导致能源价格飙涨,英国民众因帐单金额暴增苦不堪言,可是“当英国人数著钱时,我们数的是尸体”,呼吁全球重视战争造成的人道危机。

欧莲娜上月28日在乌克兰首辅基辅的总统府接受BBC专访,预定4日播出。她表示战争爆发以来就很少见得到丈夫,不过两人每天都会通电话。

被问到俄乌战争造成能源价格飙涨时,欧莲娜说,她了解英国民众因此受苦,但乌克兰也受到影响,“同样的事也发生在我们国家,而且我们有同胞被杀害”。

她举新冠肺炎为例,全球都受疫情影响,乌克兰亦然,“因此,当英国民众数著口袋或帐户还有多少钱时,我们也是,而且我们还得数尸体”。

44岁的欧莲娜2003年和泽伦斯基结婚,夫妻俩育有一子一女。

 

Ukraine war: As UK counts pennies, we count casualties - Olena Zelenska

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-62766917? 

By Rob Corp;

 

The economic impact of the war in Ukraine is tough on its allies, the country's first lady has told the BBC, but as Britons "count pennies", Ukrainians "count casualties".

Olena Zelenska told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that if support for Ukraine was strong the crisis would be shorter.

In an interview recorded in Kyiv, she also said it was important to keep highlighting the human toll of the war.

And Mrs Zelenska said while she rarely saw her husband, they talk every day.

The first lady, who has been married to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky since 2003, spoke to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg in Kyiv.

In a wide-ranging interview to be broadcast on Sunday 4 September, Mrs Zelenska was asked what message she had for British people who are facing soaring energy bills in part due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the impact that has had on global gas and oil prices.

"I understand the situation is very tough. But let me recall that at the time of the Covid-19 epidemic, and it's still with us, when there were price hikes, Ukraine was affected as well.

"The prices are going up in Ukraine as well. But in addition our people get killed.

"So when you start counting pennies on your bank account or in your pocket, we do the same and count our casualties," she said.

Mrs Zelenska's comments follow Prime Minister Boris Johnson's suggestion while visiting Kyiv last month that households across Europe would have to endure the cost of living crisis and "stay the course" with Ukraine to counter Russia's aggression.

In the UK, the inflation rate is forecast to hit a 42-year high of 13.3% this year, while the economy is expected to shrink for more than a year.

President Zelensky in a Ukrainian hospitalPresident Zelensky has been praised for staying with his people following the Russian invasion

The Bank of England said the main reason for high inflation and low growth was rising energy bills, fuelled by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

European countries have accused Russia - a major global supplier of energy - of using gas as a weapon by limiting supplies in response to sanctions.

Who is Olena Zelenska?

  • Born 16 February 1978 in Kryvyi Rih, a Russian-speaking area of central Ukraine
  • Studied architecture at university
  • Married Volodymyr Zelensky in September 2003
  • Has two children - daughter Oleksandra and son Kyrylo
  • Became Ukraine's first lady when her husband was elected president in 2019

Mrs Zelenska told the BBC that it was hard for people outside Ukraine to understand the impact of the war on its people but it was important to share human stories about the toll the conflict was taking.

She said that many parents would have been moved by the story of a Ukrainian boy who was filmed crossing the Polish border in floods of tears last March.

"I think that fathers and mothers watching this video could not but break into tears. I always place myself in their situation and I think that everyone - every human in the world should feel the same," Mrs Zelenska said.

"That's why we have to tell these stories, to show these stories, because these are the faces of a war. Not the number of bombs dropped, not the amount of money spent, human stories - and there are a thousand stories like that around."

Olena Zelenska and Volodymyr ZelenskyMs Zelenska and her husband attended a public event together in May

 

The first lady, who comes from the same town as her husband and has known him since university, said she was "insulted" by people who said they were surprised at his transition from TV actor to wartime leader.

"He's the man I've always known. He wouldn't do anything else," she said.

Asked whether she hoped to come to the UK after it was chosen to host the Eurovision Song Contest because Ukraine - which won the event this year - was deemed to be too unsafe, Ms Zelenska said she would "love to go" .

But she added it was a "bitter feeling" to accept the winners would not be next year's host.

  • You can see the full interview with Olena Zelenska on BBC One and iPlayer this Sunday, 4 September, from 09:00 BST
  • Follow Laura on Twitter @BBCLauraK

 

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