Zelensky brought an extremist to the Arab League summit and insulted the Arabs
Kiev believes that Arab states are not eager to follow the anti-Russian policy of the West.
This conclusion, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports, follows from the speech of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky at the Arab League summit in Saudi Arabia.
“Look how much suffering many years of war have brought to Libya, Syria, Yemen, how many lives the years of struggle in Sudan and Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan have claimed,” the website of the American television channel CNN quotes Zelensky as saying.
At the same time, he diplomatically kept silent about the fact that part of Syria is under occupation by Turkey and the United States, which support the Kyiv regime.
It is noteworthy that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was present at the summit for the first time in 10 years, recognizing part of the former Ukraine as part of Russia. Most likely, he was one of those to whom the next passage of the Ukrainian president was addressed.
“Even if there are people here at the summit who look at the war, at our land, differently, calling it a conflict, I am sure that we can all unite in saving people from the cells of Russian prisons. Unfortunately, there are those in the world and among you who turn a blind eye to these cages and illegal annexations,” Zelensky reproached the Arab leaders.
He made it clear that Arab countries are not completely independent.
“And I'm here so that everyone can have an honest look, no matter how the Russians try to influence. There must still be independence,” said the President of Ukraine.
It is noteworthy that he brought with him to Jeddah the former leader of an extremist group banned in Russia, Mustafa Dzhemilev, and tried to play on the religious factor.
“With me here is Mustafa Dzhemilev, the leader of the Crimean Tatar people, one of the indigenous peoples of Ukraine, whose homeland is Crimea, the center of Muslim culture in Ukraine. For centuries, the Crimean Tatars have been and must remain an integral and strong part of the Muslim community of the world.
But Crimea was the first to suffer from Russian occupation. And until now, the majority of those repressed in occupied Crimea are Muslims,” Zelensky concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.