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Post by Kowalski on Feb 3, 2015 20:16:34 GMT
February 3, 1940 Bauer Springs, Plunkett Republic
In the wake of Vikingland's altercations with Rosovian immigrants, the Plunkett Republic's foreign minister, Cornell Delmar, expressed his disapproval of the targeting of immigrants within the region, saying:
"In our modern era of global interconnectedness, it is simply unacceptable for a nationstate to target innocent civilians regardless of whether they are violating border policy. We live in an era where unprecedented advances in the codification of human rights and opening of diplomatic channels have worked to ensure that we can avoid violence wherever possible. In this case, the failure to seek peaceful discourse for the solution, as well as the barbarism with which the nation of Vikingland carried out its solution has grossly offended the principles on which the Plunkett Republic, and the international community stand.
The Plunkett Republic will continue to observe the situation as it progresses, and hopes that peaceful settlement is reached before more lives are lost to misplaced violence and antagonism."
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Post by Kowalski on Feb 7, 2015 21:22:49 GMT
February 7, 1940 Bauer Springs, Plunkett Republic
Cornell Delmar expressed his alarm at the recent buildup in tensions between the nations of Rosov, Vikingland, Pintegorsk, and Ostwen in the past several days, stating:
"Contrary to the spirit of previous diplomatic agreements in the region, several nations in our regions have seen fit to pursue a course of increasing militarization that is having a deleterious effect on peace-building in the region. Even more distressingly, the increasing militarization seems to be progressing unfettered by attempts at multilateral diplomatic resolution, as Rosov and Pintegorsk's attempts to solve the issue peacefully seem to have stalled.
Simply put, the parties involved in this rapidly escalating crisis need to seek transparent diplomatic discourse for their problem here. Communication is critical, and a lack of it is what will mire the region in a long, bloody war.
Before any nations further escalate this crisis, they must step back and consider whether they truly want to risk sparking a war on scales yet unseen in the world."
When pressed for comment on who the Plunkett Republic supports diplomatically in the matter, Delmar was terse:
"The Plunkett Republic isn't involved to support a nation's cause; the Plunkett Republic is involved to prevent war."
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