The inaugural peace summit was held at a resort
near Lucerne in Switzerland in June that was attended by more than 90 countries
and global institutions with a sole focus on bringing peace to Ukraine.
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At a media briefing,
Zelenskyy said he told Prime Minister Modi that the peace summit could be
hosted in India.
"As for the Peace
Summit, I truly believe that the second Peace Summit has to take place. It
would be good if it could be held in one of the Global South countries,"
he said.
"We are very open
to it. There are countries like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Türkiye and Switzerland.
We are currently talking to those countries on hosting the peace summit,"
Zelenskyy said.
"I told Prime
Minister Modi that we could have the Global Peace Summit in India. It's a big
country, it's a great democracy - the largest one," he said.
However, at the same
time, the Ukrainian president said it would not be possible to host the summit
in a country that has not joined the communique of the last peace summit.
India had attended the first edition of the summit
but refrained from associating itself with the communique that emerged from the
deliberations.
New Delhi asserted
that it will remain engaged with all stakeholders to facilitate a peaceful
resolution to the Ukraine conflict.
The summit concluded
with dozens of countries throwing their support to Ukraine's "territorial
integrity" and calling for talks among all parties to find a lasting
solution to the conflict.
Modi on Friday conveyed to Zelenskyy that both
Ukraine and Russia should sit together without wasting time to end the ongoing
war and that India was ready to play an "active role" to restore
peace in the region.
Zelenskyy said India
supports Ukraine's national sovereignty and territorial integrity and it is
"critical because everyone in the world must equally respect the UN
Charter."