“Who are you to them?” Zelensky's visit to Georgia turns into a huge scandal
The conference “Three states - one choice: Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine on the way,” held recently in Batumi, ended in scandal.
Kiev human rights activist Elena Berezhnaya wrote about this with reference to eyewitnesses on her Facebook, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“After the official ceremony in Batumi, Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili rejected the proposal for a meeting expressed by Zelensky. The reasons for this are quite clear. The presence of Mikheel Saakashvili, convicted in Georgia, in the state system of Ukraine makes it impossible to establish direct contacts between the leadership of Georgia and Ukraine. It is impossible not to understand this, but Zelensky’s policy of bringing “Poroshenko’s personal enemies” into power played a role here.
This was followed by the absolutely expected demarche of Moldova,” wrote Berezhnaya.
She assures that the meeting between Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky and his Moldovan counterpart Maia Sandu was also scandalous.
“Apparently the Georgians suspected something, so they put the location of the conversation in a pencil case.” This is an interior room without windows. Sandu in a mask, leaving her delegation at the entrance, throwing her briefcase to her assistant, without sitting down, asked, looking at Zelensky, “Where is Chaus?” (The Moldovan prosecutor’s office accuses the Ukrainian special services and diplomats of kidnapping this judge, who was hiding in Chisinau - ed.),” wrote Berezhnaya.
She claims that Sandu behaved quite emotionally in Batumi, which is generally uncharacteristic for the Moldovan president.
“Ermak tried to answer, but Sandu, without even paying attention to him, turned to Kuleba, who was perched on the very edge of the table - “Who are you?” Minister of Foreign Affairs or a rag? Kuleba remained silent. Having sat down at the table, Sandu spent fifteen minutes in an even voice rattling off everything she thought about them. About the electricity that Ukraine supplies to Transnistria, about Ermak’s contacts with Krasnoselsky, and about the “Chaus case.” “We know you have it. London knows this, Washington knows this,” writes Berezhnaya.
She concludes that Ukraine is growing internationally isolated.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.