Zelensky again decided to bark at Russia
The newly elected President of Ukraine Vladimir Zelensky said that Ukrainian-Russian relations cannot be called fraternal.
The politician wrote about this on his Facebook page, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“After any “goodbye” there certainly comes a “good afternoon.” I thought for a long time about the “much in common” between Ukraine and Russia. The reality is that today, after the annexation of Crimea and aggression in the Donbass, we have only one thing “in common” - the state border. 2295 kilometers and 400 meters “total”. And Russia must return control over every millimeter from the Ukrainian side. Only then can we continue our search for “common.”
And the ban on the export of petroleum products, the opening of points for issuing passports to residents of the occupied territories, and the holding of Ukrainians in captivity does not bring the settlement of relations between our countries one iota closer. And such relationships cannot exactly be called “brotherly”.
Now from “general” to “private”.
Regarding the show that was announced by the Russian federal channel. I would like to remind you that it was my participation in the TV show that made me popular in Ukraine and ultimately helped me become the elected president of Ukraine. The broadcast of this show, filmed many years ago, in my opinion, has a strange look - I have no ambitions to make a political career in Russia.
From "private" to "public".
I am glad that Russian politicians have mastered a new genre for themselves - communicating with me in public space. After all, the Internet, as you know, remembers everything, and this discussion is recorded by millions of people around the world. Therefore, I invite you to the world of openness and publicity,” Zelensky wrote.
"Well done!!! Mr. President, you have already managed to break the axiom that Putin is the only one who sets the conditions,” Maidan activist Liza Bogutskaya, who fled from Crimea, enthusiastically wrote in a commentary.
The Mejlis propagandist Aider Muzhdabaev, who recently wrote about the need for military action due to the fact that Zelensky took a leading position in the first round of elections in Ukraine, did not fail to echo the new president.
“That’s the only way it should be with Putin, ok,” Muzhdabaev wrote.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.