Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Wednesday 29 May that Russia was still
trying to disrupt next month's world "peace summit" devoted to the
conflict with Russia and was putting pressure on countries to stay away from
the gathering.
Zelenskiy wants the summit, scheduled
for June 15-16 in Switzerland, to produce a front to exert pressure on Russia
and advance his "peace formula" -- which calls for the withdrawal of
Russian troops and the restoration of Ukraine's 1991 borders.
"Russia
will no longer be able to disrupt the summit although it is trying very hard to
do so," Zelenskiy said. "It is putting pressure on leaders, openly
threatening various countries with destabilisation. And this is one of the
consequences of the world giving the terrorist state too much time."
He said
officials from Ukraine's government, parliament and other institutions were
working to ensure maximum participation and make the summit "truly
effective, which is needed to bring real peace closer".
The
summit's Swiss hosts have not invited Russia and Moscow dismisses the event as
pointless without its participation.
The
Kremlin says it is prepared to negotiate on an end to the conflict and suggests
as a starting point talks held in the war's first weeks in 2022 which appeared
to be close to an agreement, which Ukrainian negotiators then rejected.
Moscow dismisses Zelenskiy's plan as
unworkable and
says any discussion must take into account "new realities", including
the fact that Russia holds about 18 percent of Ukraine's territory.