New Delhi: More than 900 educational institutions, including well-known medical colleges, were reported to be damaged or destroyed in Ukraine due to the ongoing war and hence India is exploring ways to help its students whose education in Ukraine has been interrupted by the war.
India’s Deputy Permanent Representative at the UN, R. Ravindra, said – “We are exploring options to minimise the impact on our students’ education” during a debate in the UN Security Council on the humanitarian situation in Ukraine centred on education and children.
“We appreciate the relaxations made by the Ukrainian government for this academic year in respect of medical students,” he mentioned.
According to media reports, the Ukrainian Education Ministry has said that the final year MBBS students at universities there would get their degrees without having to take the final licensing exams.
Ravindra also called for international cooperation to ensure energy security, which has been affected by disruption in supplies from Russia that have sent oil and gas prices soaring.
According to the Ukrainian Education Ministry, there had been 18,095 Indian students studying there before the Russian invasion. They were among the 22,500 Indian citizens who, Ravindra said, were safely brought back to India.
Ravindra said that over 900 educational institutions have been reported damaged or destroyed in Ukraine and called for “unequivocal” international support for Ukraine to protect them and continue educating children.
Ravindra said: “Since the beginning of the Ukrainian conflict, India has stood for peace, dialogue and diplomacy. We believe that no solution can be arrived at by shedding blood and at the cost of innocent lives, especially those of women and children.”
“It is in our collective interest to work constructively, both within the United Nations and outside, towards seeking an early resolution to the conflict,” he emphasised, sharing India’s oft-repeated stance on the conflict.
US Deputy Permanent Representative Richard Mills said: “Many on this Council (UNSC) have just now called for diplomacy to resolve this crisis.”
“We agree that diplomacy and dialogue are essential to resolve this crisis, and Russia should show its commitment to pursuing a peaceful resolution by silencing the guns and withdrawing its forces from Ukraine,” he added.
Mr Ravindra also drew attention to the food crisis developing from the war and said that it “requires us to respond by going beyond constraints that bind us presently” — a reference to World Trade Organisation (WTO) restrictions.
While India has a stockpile of wheat estimated at 100 million tonnes, it faces problems exporting it because of the WTO restrictions on selling them because the government has acquired them from farmers — which India does to support the price levels.
Russia and Ukraine together account for about 30 per cent of the global wheat exports, which has been affected by the war.
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