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Putin sets terms for ceasefire Ukraine must pull out from annexed parts

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Russian President Vladimir Putin promised on Friday to immediately order a cease-fire in Ukraine and start negotiations if Kyiv began withdrawing troops from the four regions annexed by Moscow in 2022 and renounced plans to join NATO.
Russian President Vladimir Putin promised on Friday to immediately order a cease-fire in Ukraine and start negotiations if Kyiv began withdrawing troops from the four regions annexed by Moscow in 2022 and renounced plans to join NATO. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy rejected what he called an ultimatum by Putin to surrender more territory. Click here to connect with us on WhatsApp Putin’s remarks came as Switzerland prepared to host scores of world leaders — but not from Moscow — this weekend to try to map out first steps toward peace in Ukraine. They also coincided with a meeting of leaders of the Group of Seven leading industrialised nations in Italy and after the US and Ukraine this week signed a 10-year security agreement that Russian officials, including Putin, denounced as null and void.
Putin blasted the Switzerland conference as just another ploy to divert everyone’s attention, reverse the cause and effect of the Ukrainian crisis (and) set the discussion on the wrong track.
His demands came in a speech at the Russian Foreign Ministry and was aimed at what he called a final resolution of the conflict rather than freezing it, and stressed the Kremlin is ready to start negotiations without delay.
Broader demands for peace that Putin listed included Ukraine’s recognition of Crimea as part of Russia, keeping the country’s non-nuclear status, restricting its military force and protecting the interests of the Russian-speaking population. All of these should be part of fundamental international agreements, and all Western sanctions against Russia should be lifted, Putin said.
We’re urging to turn this tragic page of history and to begin restoring, step-by-step, the unity between Russia and Ukraine and in Europe in general, he said.
Putin’s remarks, made to a group of somber Foreign Ministry officials and some senior lawmakers, represented a rare occasion in which he clearly laid out his conditions for ending the war in Ukraine, but it didn’t include any new demands. The Kremlin has said before that Kyiv should recognise its territorial gains and drop its bid to join NATO.
Zelenskyy, in Italy for the G7 meeting, said Putin’s proposal was not new and was in the form of an ultimatum, comparing it to actions by Adolf Hitler in seizing territory that led to World War II.
What Putin demands is to give them a part of our territories, those occupied and not occupied, talking about several regions of our country, he said.
Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry called Putin’s plan manipulative, absurd and designed to mislead the international community, undermine diplomatic efforts aimed at achieving a just peace, and split the unity of the world majority around the goals and principles of the UN Charter.

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