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Russia-Ukraine crisis: UK won’t be able to fly people out - minister

The UK will not be able to fly British nationals out of Ukraine if Russia invades, Armed Forces Minister James Heappey has warned.

He told the BBC the RAF would "not be in a position to go in" and people there should "leave now".

Mr Heappey said the advice had changed because Russia was in a position where it could attack "at no notice".

Russia has denied any plans to invade Ukraine despite massing more than 100,000 troops near the border.

On Friday, the UK Foreign Office warned British nationals in Ukraine to leave the country within 48 hours while commercial means were still available. A number of other countries have issued similar advice.

The US also said Russia could invade "any day now" and told its own citizens to leave - although it said the US did not know whether President Vladimir Putin had made a final decision.

Both French President Emmanuel Macron and US President Joe Biden spoke with Mr Putin on Saturday.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she spoke to her US counterpart, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and shared her "acute concerns" of military aggression against Ukraine within days.

She tweeted: "We agree Russia will face massive consequences for any invasion, including severe sanctions. Russia must deescalate and engage with Nato proposals."

Moscow has accused Western countries of stirring up hysteria.

Following a call with world leaders on Friday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he feared for the security of Europe and urged allies to have a "heavy package of economic sanctions ready to go" should Russia attack, Downing Street confirmed.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Mr Heappey said: "We are now confident that the artillery systems, the missile systems and the combat air are all in place that would allow Russia to launch - at no notice - an attack on Ukraine."

But he warned there would be "a big difference between what [people] may have seen on their TV screens in Afghanistan over the summer and what may happen over the next week or so" - referring to the international airlift to rescue people after the fall of Kabul to the Taliban last year.

"The Royal Air Force will not be in a position to go in and to fly people out so they need to leave now by commercial means or drive out of Ukraine into a neighbouring country," he said.

British troops helping with training in Ukraine will also be leaving the country over the weekend, Mr Heappey added on BBC Radio 4's Today programme. "There will be no troops in Ukraine if there's going to be a conflict there."

Some embassy staff are also being withdrawn but British ambassador to Ukraine, Melinda Simmons, said on Twitter: "I am staying in Kyiv and continue to work there with a core team. The embassy remains operational."

The BBC's Paul Adams in Kyiv said there were signs of urgency and departure at the British embassy, with staff loading bags into a car and driving off. Nobody seemed keen to talk.

The capital does not feel like a city in crisis though, our correspondent added.

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'Things can get out of control very fast'

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Expat Stuart McKenzie: "If the British embassy aren't here to help, everybody's on their own"

The advice to leave Ukraine has left some Britons grappling with difficult dilemmas.

Stuart McKenzie is considering heading to Poland, after spending nearly three decades in Ukraine.

"We love Ukraine and we've built our lives, families, businesses here. None of us want to leave," he told BBC Breakfast.

"These things can get out of control very fast and we've got to be on the right side of the chaos."

But Ken Stuart said he can't leave the country - his wife has just given birth to a son, who cannot get the paperwork to travel out of Ukraine yet.

He said the UK government had made clear "we are on our own". "We're both pretty nervous," he said.

Harry Lee, from Cambridge, said he is not intending to leave Kharkiv yet, where he works as a teacher, despite being just 40 miles from the Russian border.

"Life is continuing largely as normal. There's been no signs of any panic," he says.

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Former British ambassador to the US Lord Kim Darroch said embassy and Foreign Office staff would be working around the clock to make sure British people in Ukraine - thought to number in the low thousands - were aware of the advice to leave.

"It will overwhelm the embassy's resources, you can't assume all the Brits in the country will hear this so you have to contact them," he told the Today programme.

"You may have to arrange an emergency telephone line, you'll need to send people to the airport where, with lots of foreign nationals trying to get out, there will be chaos. There may need to be extra flights laid on so this will occupy everyone's time for 24 hours a day for the next few days and you won't get everyone out - some people will choose to stay."

'Talks continue'

On Friday, Tobias Ellwood, Conservative MP and chair of the defence select committee, raised concerns about the rhetoric being used by Washington.

He told BBC's Newsnight: "It's almost bordering on panic and that absolutely fits into Putin's objective. He'll be delighted to see the West and the Nato alliance crumbling in this way."

Nato's 30 members - which include the UK, US and several former Soviet republics - agree to come to another's aid in the event of an armed attack.

Ukraine is not a member of Nato. However, it is a "partner country" and may be allowed to join the military alliance sometime in the future, a move Russia sees as a direct threat to its security.

Liz Truss meets with Sergei LavrovImage source, Getty Images
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Liz Truss had a frosty meeting with her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov earlier this week

The UK has made continued diplomatic efforts this week, with the prime minister visiting allies in Belgium and Poland, and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meeting her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.

Ms Truss's meeting proved to be ill-tempered, with Mr Lavrov saying relations between the UK and Russia left "much to be desired".

On Friday, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace met his Russian counterpart Sergei Shogiu, who he said had given him security assurances.

Mr Heappey reiterated that diplomatic lines were still being pursued.

He told BBC Breakfast: "Clearly the only route to a peaceful outcome is if talks continue, and I think if talks continue there has to be a willingness to believe what each side says to each other."

 

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